Equatorial Guinea | 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
Equatorial Guinea
Records
63
Source
Equatorial Guinea | Adjusted savings: net forest depletion (% of GNI)
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970 14.49082017
1971 3.09426677
1972 3.63726543
1973 4.57731773
1974 4.57735181
1975 5.31541776
1976 4.40801431
1977 6.51333277
1978
1979
1980 18.75491781
1981 32.87168446
1982 42.78162211
1983 28.3561318
1984 20.87543216
1985 18.30618405
1986 21.0519546
1987 21.1416332
1988 17.63757533
1989 22.31760722
1990 19.65451944
1991 15.29157687
1992 13.83331208
1993 14.70401579
1994 31.64770848
1995 38.42217743
1996 27.12067376
1997 16.92665249
1998 14.36755221
1999 12.63379028
2000 8.70612929
2001 8.90737851
2002 6.86806365
2003 5.64687542
2004 2.63161428
2005 1.47512379
2006 0.90432917
2007 0.69147692
2008 0.72703836
2009 0.88103119
2010 0.62808881
2011 0.51892956
2012 0.59531026
2013 0.64362745
2014 0.75817825
2015 1.2687036
2016 1.83530844
2017 2.57579318
2018 2.67141628
2019 2.65907599
2020 3.00176416
2021 2.58840524
2022
Equatorial Guinea | 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
Equatorial Guinea
Records
63
Source