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- <text id=94TT1135>
- <title>
- Aug. 29, 1994: Environment:Chain Saws Invade Eden
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Aug. 29, 1994 Nuclear Terror for Sale
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 58
- Chain Saws Invade Eden
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Vast, pristine forests in South America's sparsely populated
- Guyanas ought to be safe. Not so.
- </p>
- <p>By Eugene Linden/Paramaribo
- </p>
- <p> From high atop a massive bald rock called the Voltzberg, visitors
- to Suriname can look in awe at the same sight that greeted explorer
- Sir Walter Raleigh 400 years ago: an emerald forest that seemingly
- stretches to infinity in all directions. Even though the world
- has 11 times as many humans as it did in Raleigh's day, the
- north coast of South America still contains one of the largest
- unbroken tracts of tropical forest left in the world. Fewer
- than 50,000 people live in a natural kingdom larger than California
- that encompasses nearly all of Suriname, Guyana and French Guiana
- and is buffered by virgin rain forest in Brazil and Venezuela.
- Some parts of the woodland are so isolated from civilization
- that monkeys are more curious than fearful when they encounter
- humans.
- </p>
- <p> That may soon change. The governments of Guyana and Suriname
- have begun to open huge tracts of forests for logging by timber
- and trading companies from Korea, Indonesia and Malaysia. Conservationists
- around the world are horrified at the prospect, aware that in
- southern Asia the loggers have ravaged forests, leaving a legacy
- of eroded hills, silt-choked rivers and barren fields. If such
- exploitation cannot be prevented in sparsely populated countries
- like Guyana and Suriname, the environmentalists ask, can deforestation
- be stopped anywhere? For thousands of years, deforestation has
- presaged the fall of civilizations. Now, for the first time,
- humanity is facing the consequences of forest destruction on
- a global scale.
- </p>
- <p> As the international logging juggernaut lurches toward Suriname
- and Guyana, several conservation groups have chosen to make
- a stand in this unspoiled part of the world. Some, like Washington-based
- Conservation International, are trying to show the two governments
- that large-scale logging is not the only way to get income from
- these magnificent forests. Another possibility is prospecting
- for natural medicines produced by the area's trees and flowers.
- San Francisco's Rainforest Action Network and Britain's World
- Rainforest Network have taken up the cause of the region's indigenous
- peoples threatened by logging. Even the World Bank, whose investments
- have led to deforestation elsewhere in the tropics, has become
- involved, encouraging Guyana to slow down the pace of logging
- and look at alternative means of development.
- </p>
- <p> Only circumstance has protected the Guyanas, as the region is
- called, from the chain saws and bulldozers leveling forests
- elsewhere. Though colonized centuries ago by the British, Dutch
- and French, the area became known for its penal camps and slave
- rebellions and never had enough appeal to draw huge numbers
- of European settlers. Today the population of Suriname, Guyana
- and French Guiana totals only 1.3 million people, nearly all
- of whom live in coastal cities. Up to now the city dwellers
- have put little pressure on the forests or the few thousand
- indigenous Amerindians who live in the woodlands. But economic
- hardship and the lure of logging revenue have begun to make
- the region's natural treasures more vulnerable.
- </p>
- <p> Suriname has been in political and financial turmoil almost
- from the time it gained its independence from the Netherlands
- in 1975. At first the Dutch and other foreign donors gave the
- new country generous aid, but they cut back sharply in the 1980s
- when Suriname suffered a series of coups and massacres. The
- violence culminated in a six-year civil war that led to the
- fall of the military regime of Lieut. Colonel Desi Bouterse
- in 1992.
- </p>
- <p> Though peace holds at the moment, international donors are reluctant
- to resume large-scale aid until the government of President
- Ronald Venetiaan puts its tottering economic house in order.
- Production is in decline, the unemployment rate tops 20% and
- per capita annual income is only $500. Rather than risk public
- unrest, the government provides generous subsidies for fuel,
- food, water and telephone service. But the budget now exceeds
- revenues by 150%, and the government has been looking for easy
- sources of foreign exchange.
- </p>
- <p> So officials were receptive in August 1993 when an Indonesian
- investment group named N.V. MUSA Indo-Suriname asked to buy
- the rights to Suriname's trees. Cash-starved regimes are fond
- of selling timber concessions because they can put money in
- a treasury at little immediate cost to the government, while
- other industries can take years to produce results. Timber operations
- often ultimately drain more money than they yield by burdening
- a nation's infrastructure and degrading precious natural assets,
- but it is easy for a sitting government to ignore these costs
- because they become a problem only for subsequent administrations.
- </p>
- <p> The MUSA group boldly asked for timber rights to more than 15
- million acres of Suriname, nearly one-third of the country.
- The Venetiaan administration avoided a messy political debate
- by instead granting a smaller concession of 375,000 acres near
- the Guyana border. MUSA then began logging without specifying
- how it will abide by Suriname's strict forestry code. Experts
- claim that the only profitable way to harvest MUSA's particular
- stretch of rain forest would be to clear-cut the region, leaving
- behind a wasteland. Other Asian interests have also put in timber
- bids. The Malaysian investment group Berjaya Group Berhad is
- trying to secure rights to 7.5 million acres in Suriname.
- </p>
- <p> Neighboring Guyana, also desperate for quick cash, has granted
- huge concessions to Asian logging consortiums. The former British
- colony, a victim of years of Marxist economics, is poorer than
- any other Latin American nation except Haiti and is staggering
- under a $2 billion foreign debt load, an amount 10 times its
- gross domestic product. In 1991 the government of President
- Desmond Hoyte granted a Malaysian-Korean joint venture called
- Barama Co. Ltd. the rights to log 4.2 million acres in the country's
- northwest. When voters elected former Marxist Cheddi Jagan as
- President in 1992, Guyanese conservationists urged him to revoke
- that concession; instead Jagan toured Southeast Asia at Barama's
- expense, and his government is considering bids that would put
- roughly 75% of Guyana's timber under foreign control.
- </p>
- <p> And what will Guyana get in return? Not much, if the agreement
- with Barama represents a precedent. Barama was granted a five-year
- tax holiday and will make only modest royalty payments. Within
- five years, this concession is expected to produce $20 million
- to $30 million annually for Guyana, but conservationists argue
- that this is a pittance for sacrificing nearly 10% of the country.
- </p>
- <p> Russ Mittermeier, president of Conservation International, argues
- that Guyana should consider development alternatives that produce
- income while leaving the forests in place. He notes that the
- country might receive royalty income equivalent to what will
- be generated by the Barama concession should even one species
- of tree yield a chemical that turns into a successful pharmaceutical
- compound. Another option is an ecotourism business that would
- take visitors to Guyana's spectacular natural wonders, including
- Kaieteur Falls. Unfortunately, outsiders have come up with few
- other suggestions. Says a World Bank official: "It's incredibly
- frustrating to think that there are so few alternatives to logging
- at present."
- </p>
- <p> Both Guyana and Suriname have a coterie of conservationists
- who are aware that the area possesses something special in this
- crowded world. Says Brigadier General Joe Singh, chief of staff
- of Guyana's army and an influential voice in his small nation:
- "There is a commitment here to make sure that Guyana does not
- repeat the mistakes of other countries." To see examples of
- these mistakes, President Jagan need only take another look
- at the forests of the Asian nations bidding for Guyana's and
- Suriname's timber. And this time he might ask why consortiums
- from nations that once contained some of the largest tropical
- rain forests on earth now must look for wood 11,000 miles from
- home.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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