Environmental Risks

Rainforests

Indonesia has one of the highest deforestation rates in the world, and just under half of the country’s original forest cover now remains.  Although estimates vary widely, conservative studies suggest more than a million hectares (2.4 million acres) of Indonesian rainforest is cleared and lost each year.

The Sumatran Rainforest will mostly disappear within 20 years. An estimated 80,000 acres of tropical rainforests are lost every day. Every day an estimated 100 plant and animal species are lost due to deforestation.

Coral Reefs

58% of the world's coral reefs are potentially threatened by human activity. We have already lost 27% of the world's coral reefs. If present rates of destruction are allowed to continue, 60% of the world's coral reefs will be destroyed over the next 30 years.  33-50% of coral reefs have been largely or completely degraded by a combination of local factors and global climate change. Reefs in many regions have lost half or more of their live corals.

Whales

Despite a moratorium on commercial whaling and the declaration of virtually the whole of the Southern Ocean as a whale sanctuary, each year over 1,000 whales are killed for the commercial market. Seven out of the 13 great whale species are still endangered or vulnerable after decades of protection.

Sharks

Over 100 million sharks are killed every year, many for shark fin soup and culled.

Fish stocks

Two-thirds of the world's fish stocks are either fished at their limit or overfished. The UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has estimated that 70 percent of the fish population is fully used, overused or in crisis.

Palm Oil

300 football fields of rainforest are cleared each hour to make way for palm oil production.

The Brazilian Ministry of Agriculture projects

An expansion of soy plantations from 21.5 million hectares to 26.5 million hectares by the crop year 2022/2023. Rainforests and savannahs are feeling the strain, as are iconic species like the jaguar and giant anteater. 

 New Zealand Sea lions

Without protection, they could be functionally extinct by 2035.

Deterioration of The New Zealand Environment
445,000 hectares of forestry land is at risk of being deforested and converted into pastoral use – the majority for dairying. This is equivalent to 910,000 rugby fields or over seven times the size of Lake Taupo. The national forestry plantation estate is currently 1.8 million hectares. This means that over 25 percent of the nation’s plantation is at risk of being deforested to convert to dairy.

New Zealand Water

Increased algae blooms containing toxic levels of bacteria are polluting our waterways and 75% of native freshwater fish species are threatened with extinction.

New Zealand Disaster on the Horizon
 943 species of terrestrial invertebrate threatened with extinction, and a further 1316 species are thought to be threatened but too little is known about them to classify them as such.

New Zealand Frogs

New Zealand had seven species of frog, and now there are four, each of which is threatened with extinction.

Rabbit Hemorrhagic Virus

The long-term prognosis for the environment and ability to cross species is still an unknown entity. Both New Zealand and Australia continue to ignore world scientific advice. This puts the rare New Zealand Enderby Rabbit at risk.

Poisoning of the Environment

1080 (sodium monofluoroacetate) is a class "A Toxin." Lethal to all breathing animals. It is also an extremely effective insecticide, killing not only the insects at the bottom of the food chain but mammals, birds, bats, insects, lizards.  The aerial application of 1080 poison is banned in the U.S. due to its "Extreme hazard to human health and the environment." (USA environmental Protection Agency).