Cabo Verde | Adjusted savings: net forest depletion (% of GNI)
Net forest depletion is calculated as the product of unit resource rents and the excess of roundwood harvest over natural growth. Limitations and exceptions: A positive net depletion figure for forest resources implies that the harvest rate exceeds the rate of natural growth; this is not the same as deforestation, which represents a change in land use. In principle, there should be an addition to savings in countries where growth exceeds harvest, but empirical estimates suggest that most of this net growth is in forested areas that cannot currently be exploited economically. Because the depletion estimates reflect only timber values, they ignore all the external and nontimber benefits associated with standing forests.
Publisher
The World Bank
Origin
Cabo Verde
Records
63
Source
Cabo Verde | Adjusted savings: net forest depletion (% of GNI)
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980 0.73756736
1981 0.63087954
1982 0.92257214
1983 0.56994213
1984 0.53305563
1985 0.34434414
1986 0.40297651
1987 0.30423552
1988 0.29751882
1989 0.2953053
1990 0.31951262
1991 0.31958865
1992 0.30276965
1993 0.17990558
1994 0.27940208
1995 0.37734593
1996 0.38443155
1997 0.38335563
1998 0.39168974
1999 0.20568547
2000 0.23553565
2001 0.31709064
2002 0.35078258
2003 0.46461223
2004 0.37472167
2005 0.35995437
2006 0.29989672
2007 0.32902301
2008 0.31598014
2009 0.35213618
2010 0.31159532
2011 0.31367228
2012 0.38973516
2013 0.37466091
2014 0.42538153
2015 0.52204238
2016 0.52327515
2017 0.46100936
2018 0.25804265
2019 0.2530219
2020 0.32614163
2021 0.30205575
2022
Cabo Verde | Adjusted savings: net forest depletion (% of GNI)
Net forest depletion is calculated as the product of unit resource rents and the excess of roundwood harvest over natural growth. Limitations and exceptions: A positive net depletion figure for forest resources implies that the harvest rate exceeds the rate of natural growth; this is not the same as deforestation, which represents a change in land use. In principle, there should be an addition to savings in countries where growth exceeds harvest, but empirical estimates suggest that most of this net growth is in forested areas that cannot currently be exploited economically. Because the depletion estimates reflect only timber values, they ignore all the external and nontimber benefits associated with standing forests.
Publisher
The World Bank
Origin
Cabo Verde
Records
63
Source