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Article: Effective moratoria on land acquisitions reduce tropical deforestation: Evidence from Indonesia

TitleEffective moratoria on land acquisitions reduce tropical deforestation: Evidence from Indonesia
Authors
Keywordsland concessions
Indonesia
policy-driven moratorium
forest loss
Issue Date2019
Citation
Environmental Research Letters, 2019, v. 14, n. 4, article no. 044009 How to Cite?
AbstractThe tropics have suffered substantial forest loss, and elevated deforestation rates have been closely linked to large-scale land acquisitions (LSLA). Having a timely and accurate understanding of global LSLA pattern will be critically important for concluding related policies and actions. Here, we investigate global LSLA networks and find that land acquisitions are characterized by dominant acquisition flows from the developing to the developed world (75.4%), and less of these flows are retained within the developing world (22.8%) or the developed world (1.8%). Policy-driven moratoria on existing LSLA are a key mechanism used to minimize global forest loss and recently employed in Indonesia, however their effectiveness remains unclear given a lack of quantitative synthesis. Based on a spatially-explicit temporal analysis of forest loss from 2001-2017, we find that, as a whole of Indonesia, the increased forest loss rate of 0.091 Mha yr (2001-2011) slowed down to 0.001 Mha yr (2012-2017) after moratoria established in 2011. Meanwhile, based on a comparison of annual forest loss in logging, timber, and oil palm concessions, we find that land concessions outside the moratorium experienced 35%-396% higher rates of forest loss than in comparable land concessions within the moratorium. Decreased forest loss from full implementation of moratoria on all land concessions could mitigate a maximum aboveground biomass carbon emission of 112 888 ± 24 766 Mg C yr , which is a nearly 41.89% reduction relative to the counterfactual scenario of no moratorium. These findings lend support for international cooperation and collective action to put into practice effective land moratoria to reverse decade-long trajectories of tropical forest loss. -1 -1 -1
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/299591
ISSN
ISI Accession Number ID

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorChen, Bin-
dc.contributor.authorKennedy, Christina M.-
dc.contributor.authorXu, Bing-
dc.date.accessioned2021-05-21T03:34:44Z-
dc.date.available2021-05-21T03:34:44Z-
dc.date.issued2019-
dc.identifier.citationEnvironmental Research Letters, 2019, v. 14, n. 4, article no. 044009-
dc.identifier.issn1748-9318-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/299591-
dc.description.abstractThe tropics have suffered substantial forest loss, and elevated deforestation rates have been closely linked to large-scale land acquisitions (LSLA). Having a timely and accurate understanding of global LSLA pattern will be critically important for concluding related policies and actions. Here, we investigate global LSLA networks and find that land acquisitions are characterized by dominant acquisition flows from the developing to the developed world (75.4%), and less of these flows are retained within the developing world (22.8%) or the developed world (1.8%). Policy-driven moratoria on existing LSLA are a key mechanism used to minimize global forest loss and recently employed in Indonesia, however their effectiveness remains unclear given a lack of quantitative synthesis. Based on a spatially-explicit temporal analysis of forest loss from 2001-2017, we find that, as a whole of Indonesia, the increased forest loss rate of 0.091 Mha yr (2001-2011) slowed down to 0.001 Mha yr (2012-2017) after moratoria established in 2011. Meanwhile, based on a comparison of annual forest loss in logging, timber, and oil palm concessions, we find that land concessions outside the moratorium experienced 35%-396% higher rates of forest loss than in comparable land concessions within the moratorium. Decreased forest loss from full implementation of moratoria on all land concessions could mitigate a maximum aboveground biomass carbon emission of 112 888 ± 24 766 Mg C yr , which is a nearly 41.89% reduction relative to the counterfactual scenario of no moratorium. These findings lend support for international cooperation and collective action to put into practice effective land moratoria to reverse decade-long trajectories of tropical forest loss. -1 -1 -1-
dc.languageeng-
dc.relation.ispartofEnvironmental Research Letters-
dc.rightsThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.-
dc.subjectland concessions-
dc.subjectIndonesia-
dc.subjectpolicy-driven moratorium-
dc.subjectforest loss-
dc.titleEffective moratoria on land acquisitions reduce tropical deforestation: Evidence from Indonesia-
dc.typeArticle-
dc.description.naturepublished_or_final_version-
dc.identifier.doi10.1088/1748-9326/ab051e-
dc.identifier.scopuseid_2-s2.0-85068863628-
dc.identifier.volume14-
dc.identifier.issue4-
dc.identifier.spagearticle no. 044009-
dc.identifier.epagearticle no. 044009-
dc.identifier.eissn1748-9326-
dc.identifier.isiWOS:000462895800005-

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