21
Direct and Indirect Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation Causes of Deforestation Daniel Murdiyarso CIFOR Seminar on Climate Change, Agriculture and Trade Bogor, 12 May 2008

Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

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Page 1: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

Direct and Indirect Direct and Indirect Causes of DeforestationCauses of Deforestation

Daniel MurdiyarsoCIFOR

Seminar on Climate Change, Agriculture and TradeBogor, 12 May 2008

Page 2: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

OutlineOutline

• Introduction• Decreasing forest cover• Causes of deforestation• Challenges for biofuels development• Conclusions

• Introduction• Decreasing forest cover• Causes of deforestation• Challenges for biofuels development• Conclusions

Page 3: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

0% 100%

tree cover threshold

Global forest cover is steadily decresing

Courtesy: Matt Hansen, S. Dakota State Univ.

Page 4: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

• Total emissions p.a.: 7.2 GtC (27 Gt CO2)Fossil fuels: 5.6 GtC (21 Gt CO2) LUCF: 1.6 GtC (6 Gt CO2)

• Deforestation contributes: 20% • Forest area: 1.3 Bha • Deforestation rate: 11 Mha/y (1%/y)• Deforestation contributes: 0.25%/y to soybeans

6%/y to oil palm

• Total emissions p.a.: 7.2 GtC (27 Gt CO2)Fossil fuels: 5.6 GtC (21 Gt CO2) LUCF: 1.6 GtC (6 Gt CO2)

• Deforestation contributes: 20% • Forest area: 1.3 Bha • Deforestation rate: 11 Mha/y (1%/y)• Deforestation contributes: 0.25%/y to soybeans

6%/y to oil palm

Some numbersSome numbers

Page 5: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

C-emissions from LUC in the tropics (million tons)

C-emissions from LUC in the tropics (million tons)

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

1400

18501865

18801895

19101925

19401955

19701985

2000

South and Southeast Asia

South and Central America

Sub-Saharan Africa

Source:. Houghton (2004)

Page 6: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

Deforestation rates in IndonesiaDeforestation rates in IndonesiaImage and

DateForest cover

Deforestation rate (Mha/yr)

Reference

LANDSAT1997

95,843,088 1.7 Holmes (1999)

LANDSAT1998

95,628,800 1.8 WRI-FWI-GFW (1999)

SPOT vegetation2000

103,793,886 1.2 JRC/EU (2000)

Page 7: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

Land-based emissionsLand-based emissions

(1,000)

(500)

0

500

1,000

1,500

2,000

2,500

3,000

United States China Indonesia Brazil Russia

MtCO2e

Agriculture Forestry

Source: PEACE (2007)

Page 8: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

Peatland drainage and fires

Subsidence = = Subsidence

Water table

Drainage canal

CO2 emissions

Evapotranspiration

Evaporation

Fire Fire

Fire

Oxidation +Compaction

Oxidation +Compaction

∪<><

<><

<><

Page 9: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

When enough is enoughWhen enough is enough

24% of deforestation29% of deforestation

17% of deforestation

24% of deforestation29% of deforestation

17% of deforestation

Source: http://www.panda.org/news_facts/newsroom/index.cfm?uNewsID=125741

Page 10: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

Planned deforestationPlanned deforestation• Logging has played an

important role in regional economy

• Ministerial Decree 1983

• Involve ca. 30 Mha tropical forests

• Large tropical forests have been converted to cash and estate crops (timber, pulpwood and oil-palm plantations)

Page 11: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

The development of oil-palm plantations in Indonesia(x 1000 ha)

The development of oil-palm plantations in Indonesia(x 1000 ha)

Island 1985 1998 New Outstanding

Kalimantan 0 563 563 4,760Sumatra 806 2,240 1,435 9,395Sulawesi 12 101 89 665Papua 23 31 8 590Maluku 0 0 0 236Others 2 22 20 1,777

Total 843 2,957 2,115 17,423

Source: World Bank, 1999

Page 12: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

Biofuels development Biofuels development • Is it really green or climate neutral?• Oil palm plantations often result in forest

conversions (including peatlands) and thus increase emissions

• Can we avoid deforestation while promoting biofuels?

• Is it really green or climate neutral?• Oil palm plantations often result in forest

conversions (including peatlands) and thus increase emissions

• Can we avoid deforestation while promoting biofuels?

Page 13: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

Net effect on climate changeNet effect on climate change

(Cf - Cop)Compensation point = --------------------------------------------------------------------

(12/44) * (CO2eq,min-die - (fcal * CO2eq,bio-die-a)) * YLD

Danielsen et al., Forthcoming

Page 14: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

Causes of deforestationCauses of deforestation

Direct causes• Agricultural

expansions• Wood extraction/

logging• Infrastructure

development

(Geist and Lambin, 2002)

Indirect/underlying causes• Economic factors• Political factors • Technological factors• Cultural factors• Demographic factors

(Kaimowitz and Angelsen, 1997)

Page 15: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

Unsustainable wood extractionUnsustainable wood extraction• Poor logging practices in

“legal” concessions • Illegal logging• Debris left behind fuels

forest fires

• Poor logging practices in “legal” concessions

• Illegal logging• Debris left behind fuels

forest fires

Page 16: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

Infrastructure developmentInfrastructure development

• Road construction• Provides access for timber extraction,

conversion, and settlement

• Road construction• Provides access for timber extraction,

conversion, and settlement

Page 17: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

Economic: Market failuresEconomic: Market failures• Commodity prices continue to rise• Carbon, biodiversity, water and other ecosystem

services remain underpriced

• Commodity prices continue to rise• Carbon, biodiversity, water and other ecosystem

services remain underpriced

Source: Roberts (2007)

Page 18: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

Political: Governance failuresPolitical: Governance failures• Unclear property rights• Overlapping jurisdictions • Non-transparent decision-making• Weak law enforcement and judicial systems

• Unclear property rights• Overlapping jurisdictions • Non-transparent decision-making• Weak law enforcement and judicial systems

Page 19: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

Technological: Misguided policiesTechnological: Misguided policies• Structural overcapacity in pulp and

paper sector• Insufficient fiber supply from

plantations• World demand on pulp and paper

• Structural overcapacity in pulp and paper sector

• Insufficient fiber supply from plantations

• World demand on pulp and paper

Source: Wright, 2004

China• 2002: 13.5 Mt y-1

• 2005: 25.1 Mt y-1

• Approved further 10.5 Mt y-1

Page 20: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

Challenges for biofuelsChallenges for biofuels• The EU target for biofuels in the transport

sector is 5.7 percent by 2010 and 10 percent by 2020

• To what extent is biofuels development leading to the loss of forests and associated ES, such as water and bioD?

• Under what circumstances can the transition from fossil fuels to biofuels be consistent with broader SD objectives, incl. poverty reduction?

• How will biofuel crops displace domestic food production and affect food prices?

• Strong policies and standards/ certification procedures are needed

• The EU target for biofuels in the transport sector is 5.7 percent by 2010 and 10 percent by 2020

• To what extent is biofuels development leading to the loss of forests and associated ES, such as water and bioD?

• Under what circumstances can the transition from fossil fuels to biofuels be consistent with broader SD objectives, incl. poverty reduction?

• How will biofuel crops displace domestic food production and affect food prices?

• Strong policies and standards/ certification procedures are needed

Page 21: Direct and Indirect Causes of Deforestation - International Food

Concluding RemarksConcluding Remarks

• There is a clear linkages between deforestation and world’s demands of fiber, food, and fuel

• Understanding the underlying or indirect causes of deforestation is crucial to address REDD and climate change

• Most deforestation is driven from outside forestry sector (e.g. palm-oil and pulp & paper)

• Land-use policies and spatial planning should consider carbon-rich ecosystems (e.g. peatlands)

• There is a clear linkages between deforestation and world’s demands of fiber, food, and fuel

• Understanding the underlying or indirect causes of deforestation is crucial to address REDD and climate change

• Most deforestation is driven from outside forestry sector (e.g. palm-oil and pulp & paper)

• Land-use policies and spatial planning should consider carbon-rich ecosystems (e.g. peatlands)