Abstract
The challenges of reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, while feeding
a growing population and meeting global demand for fibre and energy, are
attracting increasing attention (Kissinger 2011; Wollenberg et al. 2011). This
chapter presents an overview of current trade and investment-related drivers of deforestation and forest degradation in the tropics and the ways
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in which
they serve as obstacles to REDD+ implementation, with a closer look at
three regions. In addition, we suggest policy options that could help tackle
these global drivers by making economic growth more compatible with forest
conservation.
The discussion is organised around three questions:
1. What are the main economic drivers and trends shaping deforestation
and forest degradation in the tropics that represent major obstacles
to REDD+?
2. Which aspects of these economic drivers represent the greatest challenges
to reducing deforestation and forest degradation in Indonesia, the
Brazilian Amazon and East Africa?
3. What policy approaches would be most effective for reducing the effects
of these forces on forests and what are the implications for REDD+?
Deforestation has historically been linked to economic development,
population growth and the associated demands for food, fibre and energy.
We argue that there are a number of contemporary drivers, strongly related
to global markets and investment, that lead to increased competition for
land, including forestland in the tropics. These drivers include the increased
integration of food, fibre, energy and financial markets; high price volatility
and higher commodity prices; and a transnational land rush. They make
attempts to reduce carbon emissions through REDD+ more challenging
since, directly and indirectly, these drivers stimulate the conversion of
forestland to agricultural use and increase logging activities that often lead
to forest degradation. Nonetheless, there are important regional variations
in how these drivers affect forests, as our assessments from Indonesia, the
Brazilian Amazon and East Africa show.
We adopt a broad definition of REDD+ to mean the array of policies that
primarily aim to reduce carbon emissions from deforestation and forest
degradation and may also include result-based incentives and compensation
(see Chapter 1). Many factors affect the implementation of REDD+. In
this chapter, we focus on the global economic drivers and trends shaped by
markets and public policies – in consumer and producer countries – that
bring about changes in land use, thus affecting forest cover and quality. In
order to make REDD+ policies more effective, we must consider global
economic dynamics and their interactions with political and institutional
conditions at the national level. On the supply side, a realignment of market
incentives and regulations is needed to reorient economic development in
tropical developing countries in order to reconcile food and energy provision
with forest conservation, along with policy actions on the demand side.
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