Drivers of deforestation
The dynamics and causes of deforestation are multi-faceted and complex, and they vary from place to place. There are direct drivers of deforestation, which are associated with a complex set of indirect (“underlying”) drivers that also need to be tackled if efforts are to be successful in the long term. Drivers can also classified be as human-induced or natural.
The principal direct drivers of deforestation at the global level are:
- commercial agriculture for food, feedstock, fibre and biofuel (e.g. palm oil, soybeans, beef, maize, rice, cotton and sugar cane);
- local or subsistence agriculture;
- infrastructure expansion;
- mining; and
- urban expansion.
Illegal or otherwise unsustainable logging is principally an agent of forest degradation, but it may also be a precursor to deforestation: selectively logged forests are often deforested within a few years of logging if governance is weak and logging roads provide ready access to the land for agriculture and other development.
Underlying drivers are complex interactions of social, economic, political–institutional, technological and cultural factors that affect the direct drivers. They act at multiple scales, such as:
- global (e.g. markets forces, commodity prices, and a lack of international agreements or their enforcement);
- national (e.g. population growth or movement, domestic markets, unsound national policies, conflicting cross-sectoral policies, weak governance and institutions, market failures, lack of law enforcement, illegal activities, civil conflict, diverging interests, unequal power relations, and the centralization of services); and
- local (e.g. poverty, changes in household behaviour, landlessness, the unclear and asymmetric allocation of rights, technological change in agriculture, and a lack of investment in SFM).
The distinction between direct and underlying causes, and between human-induced and natural change, is often unclear. Deforestation usually involves long, complex chains of cause and effect.
The main drivers of deforestation are all likely to increase in coming years as a result of continued increases in population and economic growth; urbanization; meat consumption; global demand for wood products and agricultural commodities; and the impacts of climate change, such as increased fire frequency and intensity, and pest and diseases.
How to address deforestation
Identifying and analysing drivers
Identifying and analysing drivers
Location-specific, comprehensive assessments of the drivers of deforestation are the essential first steps in addressing deforestation. The general requirements for such analyses are as follows:
- Identify deforestation areas (location and extent) using the most recent data obtained from existing monitoring systems or remote sensing, complemented by historical data, local knowledge, relevant reports and statistics, and an assessment of potential future threats in order to anticipate and minimize risk.
- Analyse the specific drivers based on data obtained from existing monitoring systems, local knowledge, and other available sources of information.
- Evaluate the impact of drivers at the local, national and, where possible, global scales, looking beyond the forest sector and considering the relationship of such drivers to all land-use activities.
- Analyse the underlying drivers, particularly those at the international level. This may need to be done using economic and social indicators, statistical analyses and modelling. It should include the mapping of the main actors associated with specific deforestation drivers and with forest restoration drivers.
- Collect qualitative information from stakeholders in order to understand the dynamics of the drivers. Of particular interest are the views of stakeholders living or working in areas where deforestation or forest degradation are occurring, and those living or working at sites that are showing signs of forest recovery. Such information can be gathered through, for example, key informant interviews, focused group discussions, participatory rural appraisals, and livelihood analyses, including household surveys.
Note that the identification and analysis of drivers should be done with the full and informed participation of all stakeholders, such as the people involved in the various land uses and those benefiting from, or incurring costs due to, deforestation. Care should be taken to ensure that marginalized stakeholders, such as women and youth, minority groups, and indigenous peoples and other forest-dependent people, are able to participate meaningfully.
Main considerations
Main considerations
The following issues need to be considered when designing actions to address deforestation drivers:
- Taking a holistic approach that considers all scales. The drivers of deforestation are dynamic and interlinked and should therefore be addressed holistically. Because they occur at many scales (from local to global), strategies must integrate actions at various scales. Addressing regional or global drivers of deforestation is especially challenging and requires collaboration among countries.
- Different types of interventions. At all scales, three kinds of interventions may be considered: 1) incentives; 2) disincentives; and 3) creating an enabling environment. The table provides examples in each of these categories of measures that might be taken at various scales.
Incentives | Disincentives | Enabling |
Global/regional | ||
• Procurement and sourcing commitments: - Certification and sustainable wood and agricultural procurement policies - Government-facilitated commitments to the sustainable sourcing and importing of agricultural products linked to deforestation (e.g. soybeans) - Public–private partnerships - Commodity roundtables (e.g. palm oil, soybeans, cotton, biofuels, beef) - Environmental education in consumer countries - Revision of food production practices beyond labelling • Public disclosure of greenhouse gas emission reductions and use of high-risk commodities | • Import controls • Mandatory labelling
| • Bilateral agreements and trade accords (e.g. voluntary partnership agreements under the European Union’s Forest Law Enforcement, Governance and Trade initiative; and the United States Lacey Act) • Codes of conduct for providing international finance (e.g. Equator principles, International Finance Corporation standards) • Effective information systems
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National | ||
• Tax reductions • Subsidies • Insurance protection • Equitable benefit-sharing • Deforestation-free requirements for public procurement • Consumer awareness campaigns • Payments for environmental services | • Import moratoriums • Fees • Land-use zoning
| • Improvement of governance and policies • Strengthening of institutional capacity • Secure tenure and use rights • Zoning, land-use planning and cross-sectoral coordination • Effective information systems • Stakeholder consultation • Inclusion of assessment of risks and benefits in decisions on direct foreign investment • Adaptive research • Improving access to services such as (environmental) education, health and financial services • Policies that lead to greater economic diversity, beyond agricultural production |
Local | ||
• Credit guarantees • Support for alternative livelihoods and revenue-generating activities • Benefit-sharing | • Taxes •Fines for forest clearing • Laws and regulations to protect forest • Limits on production • Zoning • Enforcement | • Participatory landscape and forest management • The resolution of tenure issues and conflicts over natural resources • Enhancement of governance and capacities • Environmental awareness • Protected-area strategies (expansion and management) • Targeted research |
Actions to reduce deforestation should be formulated and implemented with the engagement of all stakeholders in order to achieve legitimacy and buy-in. Because the most powerful drivers of deforestation are outside the forest sector, a cross-sectoral approach is crucial. An assessment of sectoral policies (e.g. those in the forest, agriculture, mining, infrastructure and energy sectors), integrated land-use planning (taking a landscape approach), and the commitment to action by actors across sectors, are all essential for aligning sectoral interests in efforts to combat deforestation. Strategies should take into account the impacts of proposed actions on food security, local livelihoods, and climate-change mitigation and adaptation.
Actions to address deforestation drivers
Actions to address deforestation drivers
The table below provides examples of actions that could be taken to address deforestation drivers in various sectors and at different scales. Some of the suggested actions in the forest sector could be undertaken by forest managers in the context of REDD+ (such actions are also called “policies and measures” – PAMs – see the REDD+ module).
DEFORESTATION DRIVERS | ACTIONS | Sector |
Expansion of commercial agriculture (e.g. cash crops, biofuels, livestock production) | Integrated landscape approaches, including by:
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The sustainable intensification of commercial crop production to avoid the further expansion of agricultural land and forest conversion, including by:
The tools section presents other practices and approaches, such as the Climate-smart agriculture source book and “Save and grow” Actions should always be coupled with forest conservation policies; otherwise, they may exacerbate deforestation (e.g. an increase in agricultural revenue due to efficiency gains may cause further deforestation). | ||
The sustainable intensification of livestock systems in an integrated management approach, including by:
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Sustainable bioenergy/wood energy initiatives, including by:
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Increasing agricultural production on degraded lands, including by:
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Forest protection, including by:
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Demand-side policies aimed at influencing demand for, and consumer attitudes towards, sustainable products, including by:
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Subsistence and smallholder farming/ shifting cultivation | Intensification/strengthening of smallholder systems, including by:
See also the section above, “Sustainable intensification of commercial crop production” |
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| The diversification of farmers’ livelihoods and income, including by:
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Coastal farming (e.g. aquaculture), causing deforestation of mangroves and other coastal forests | Sustainable coastal farming with an integrated approach, including mangrove management, for example by:
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Unsustainable/illegal logging | Strengthening forest governance, including by:
Strengthening local forest management, including by:
Strengthening demand-side policies, including by:
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Infrastructures (roads, hydropower), mining, oil and gas extraction, settlement expansion | Encouraging integrated land-use planning and management, including by:
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Promoting forest protection, including by:
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Promoting best industry practices (e.g. those of the International Council on Mining and Minerals, and Good Practice Guidance on Mining and Biodiversity), including by:
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Prioritization, implementation and monitoring
Prioritization, implementation and monitoring
The identified actions should be ranked based on predefined criteria (e.g. objectives, estimated costs and potential for funding, existing implementation capacities, and alignment with national development priorities and plans). This will help in determining which drivers should be addressed first, the most suitable actions to take, and which drivers should not be addressed, or should be addressed later, and the rationale for the choices made.
An implementation plan for the selected interventions should be developed, establishing mechanisms for stakeholder consultations and coordination. The plan should include an efficient monitoring system to enable the assessment of interventions, stakeholder engagement and perceptions, and socioeconomic and environmental impacts, in the light of which the plan can be adapted as required.
Gender and reducing deforestation
Gender and reducing deforestation
Women are key actors in halting and reducing deforestation and in addressing related drivers. Worldwide, women have played an important role in preserving tropical forests. For example, in Zimbabwe, women’s groups (over half of the 800 000 families living in communal areas are headed by women) manage forest resource and development projects through woodlot ownership, tree planting and nursery development.
The most important driver of deforestation is agriculture, which is estimated to be the proximate driver for around 80 percent of deforestation worldwide. Given that women play a major role in small scale agricultural activities in most countries, they must actively engaged and play a major role in the design and implementation of REDD+ actions to ensure that their experiences, knowledge and needs are duly considered.
Women must also actively participate in land-use planning, which is a crucial action to halt deforestation, so as to guarantee a participative and representative process that considers the needs and aspirations of women and girls.
Women are among the social groups more affected by deforestation processes. Given their responsibility for meeting household food and fuel needs, the depletion of forest resources increases the burdens on women. A study in Malawi found deforestation was forcing elderly women to walk more than 10 km a day to collect fuel wood. Women spend on average 800 hours a year in Zambia and 300 hours a year in Tanzania on the same task. In East Africa, fuel wood scarcity has led to a reduction in the number of meals cooked in poor households.
What can be done to include women in the efforts against deforestation?
Afforestation, reforestation, or forest preservation projects that receive payment for ecosystem services, such as carbon sequestration, should mainstream gender. Women should be included in the design and implementation of the projects, as well as in the distribution of benefits. Both women and men must be trained in methods to increase carbon sequestration through new forestry technologies, including nursery techniques, site selection, and selection of species, land preparation, planting, weeding and maintenance. Responses to global climate changes should avoid a narrow criterion that leads to environmentally and socially harmful consequences. These responses should have broad goals that aim to reduce climatic change, protect natural resources, improve social well-being, promote equality and recognize that women are key agents in climate change processes.