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Thursday, January 15, 2015

This is Why Trees Come Down When the Gold Price Goes Up

With the price of gold rising five times between 2001 and 2013, satellite data shows an area of 1,680 sq km cleared across forests in Brazil, Peru and the Guianas. Much of this was in protected areas, the Guardian reports.
During the second half of the period, deforestation doubled in speed as financial crises around the world caused the price of gold to shoot up.
Agriculture and logging are responsible for clearing more forest, but, researchers say, miners are more harmful to the soil and to water sources because of their use of mercury, cyanide and arsenic.
http://time.com/3668584/south-america-gold-mining-deforestation/

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