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Facts about Ancient Forests around the World

  • Less than 10 percent of the planet's land area remains as intact forest landscapes. (Roadmap to Recovery: The world's last intact forest landscape, Greenpeace, March 2006)

  • Only 20% of the world's original ancient forests remain in tracts large enough to maintain their bio-diversity. (World Resources Institute, 1997)

  • 39% of these surviving large tracts of ancient forests are endangered by human activities, with industrial logging posing the greatest threat.

  • Seventy-six countries have already lost all their original forest cover and 11 hold on to fewer than 5%.

  • Three countries - Brazil, Canada and Russia - contain nearly 70% of all remaining frontier forests.

  • Northern Canada is home to 25% of the world's remaining frontier/ancient forests.

  • These forests are refuges for biodiversity and are vital for the survival of plant and animal species, aboriginal cultures, and climate regulation - they store more than 430 billion metric tons of carbon.

  • Of the world's remaining forests, less than half are still 'frontier forests' or intact forests with fully functioning ecosystems. (Dirk Bryant, et al, The Last Frontier Forests: Ecosystems and Economies on the Edge, World Resources Institute, 1997, p. 9, give number as 40%, http://www.wri.org/wri/ffi/lff-eng/)

  • Globally, 71% percent of the world's paper supply is derived from ecologically valuable, biologically diverse forests rather than from tree farms.

  • Canada is the world's second-largest producer of wood pulp (the United States is the largest) and sells more abroad than any other country, accounting for 30% of world exports. (http://www.nrcan-rncan.gc.ca/cfs-scf/national/ what-quoi/sof/sof05/statistics_e.html)