The two pie charts delineate the proportional distribution of the world’s forest area and timber resources across five major geographical regions.
Overall, the data reveals a significant disparity between the distribution of forest land and the concentration of timber. While Africa possesses the largest share of global forests, North America is the preeminent region for timber. The most notable feature is the inverse relationship for Africa, which leads in forest area but trails all other regions in timber supply.
A detailed analysis of forest distribution shows that Africa and North America are the dominant regions, collectively accounting for over half of the world’s forests at 27% and 25% respectively. The remaining three regions have smaller shares, with Europe holding 18%, followed by South America at 16%, and Asia possessing the smallest portion with 14%.
Conversely, the landscape of timber resources is markedly different. North America leads decisively with 30% of the global total, underscoring the high timber yield of its forests. South America, despite having a smaller forest area, is the second-largest timber contributor at 23%. Europe’s share remains relatively consistent at 20%. The most striking discrepancy is observed in Africa; despite its vast forest coverage, it contributes a mere 9% to the world’s timber, the lowest of all regions. Meanwhile, Asia’s contribution to timber (18%) is proportionally greater than its share of global forest land.
