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Forests
The Earth was once covered in ancient forests. Home to around two-thirds of all plant and animal species found on land as well as millions of people who depend on them for their survival, they still form some of the most diverse ecosystems known to science and are vitally important to the health of our planet, especially when it comes to regulating the climate.
But these ancient forests are under threat. A staggering 80 per cent have already been either destroyed or degraded, and half of that has been in the last 30 years. Illegal and destructive logging, industrial-scale farming and, increasingly, climate change all threaten the remaining tracts of forest that have stood for thousands of years.
Countless species face extinction and entire communities are being displaced. If current rates of deforestation continue, some of the last areas of ancient forest could be lost within our lifetimes, but we believe this destruction can be stopped.
We are working to protect these forests and the plants, animals and peoples that depend on them. But we can only do so with your help.
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Palm oil, deforestation and climate change
Palm oil is used in hundreds of supermarkets products and in biodiesel, but as the industry expands rainforests and swampy peatlands are being destroyed, decimating vulnerable species and accelerating climate change. -
What a carve up: the con in the Congo
In the Democratic Republic of Congo, local communities in the rainforest are being swindled as international logging companies taking extremely valuable timber in exchange for gifts worth less than £60.

