The pie chart illustrates the principal factors responsible for deforestation across the globe while the table shows the impacts of them on three particular areas, namely North America, Europe, and South America, in the 2010s.
Overall, logging was the main culprit of degraded forests in the whole world. The total percentage of declined forests in Europe was the highest among the three regions.
According to the pie chart, logging accounts for the highest proportion of deforestation at 40%, followed by agriculture, at 30%, and urban expansion, at 20%. Additionally, only 10% of forests all over the world gets destroyed by other unspecified factors.
The table highlights that 25,5% of forests in Europe were affected, with approximately 15% attributed to agricultural influences. However, North America’s forests was recorded the least damaged among the three areas, with only 9,4% of forest loss associated with logging served as the primary cause at 5,3%. South Africa ranked the second, with its proportion of degraded forests roughly twice as mush as the figure for North America at 17,5%, primarily due to logging, which accounted for 13%.
