Dominican Republic

Forests cover almost 40% of Dominican Republic’s total surface area. In recent years, the country’s tropical forests have been decreasing due to deforestation and forest degradation, driven primarily by small-scale agricultural expansion and the extraction of timber for exportation. Consequently, over the past 20 years, the Dominican Republic has ranked eighth on the list of countries most vulnerable to climate change, according to the Global Climate Risk Index.

Congo (Democratic Republic of)

The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has the second largest swath of rainforests in the world—152 million hectares, accounting for most of the remaining rainforest in the Congo Basin. Although rates of deforestation in the DRC are low compared to tropical forests in the Amazon and Southeast Asia, almost half a million hectares are lost each year. DRC’s direct drivers of deforestation include slash-and-burn agriculture, fuelwood production, bush fires, and small-scale and industrial logging.

 

Lao PDR

In Lao People's Democratic Republic (Lao PDR) forests covered much of the country’s surface area in the 1970s, but have depleted to about 51% of its total land area since the late 1990s. Forest loss has been closely linked with interests in land-based investments, and has been driven primarily by shifting cultivation, agricultural expansion, logging and plantation agriculture.