Chan Sarun
“Why do we have to convert forest? Forest that is supposed to be protected. HE Son Chhay asked, what area of forest do we have to protect? Please be specific. I want to explain about conversion...According to the evolution of the national economy... For example, in Malaysia when oil palm or rubber brought a high price, the government decided to immediately cut the forest to plant rubber or oil palms. When the price of rubber fell, they cut down the rubber trees to plant oil palms.”
Ministry of Agriculture
“When I went to the National Assembly, they asked why I want the land; I said I want it to plant my own rice, corn, and sesame. If we give it to them they’ll plant rubber. When will we have anything to eat if they plant rubber? It will take five to seven years; I may die before I have anything to eat!It is too bad but we don’t know what to do.”
A Khmer villager
Cambodia's rainforest going up in smokes.
Up to thirty percent of the rain that falls in tropical forests is water that the rainforest has recycled into the atmosphere. Water evaporates from the soil and vegetation, condenses into clouds, and falls again as rain in a perpetual self-watering cycle. In addition to maintaining tropical rainfall, the evaporation cools the Earth’s surface. In many computer models of future climate, replacing tropical forests with a landscape of pasture and crops creates a drier, hotter climate in the tropics. Some models also predict that tropical deforestation will disrupt rainfall pattern far outside the tropics, including China, northern Mexico, and the south-central United States. [Earth Observatory]
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"Earth Song" by Michael Jackson
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