Implementation and opportunity costs of reducing deforestation and forest degradation in Tanzania

Author:  ["Brendan Fisher","Simon L. Lewis","Neil D. Burgess","Rogers E. Malimbwi","Panteleo K. Munishi","Ruth D. Swetnam","R. Kerry Turner","Simon Willcock","Andrew Balmford"]

Publication:  Nature Climate Change

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Tags:     Climate environment

Abstract

Preventing deforestation—a key goal of international climate policy—can incur an opportunity cost for local communities who depend on forest resources for their livelihoods. A study compares the cost of carbon conservation through forest protection with that of a scheme that directly alleviates the demand for forest conversion. The Cancún Agreements provide strong backing for a REDD+ (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation) mechanism whereby developed countries pay developing ones for forest conservation1. REDD+ has potential to simultaneously deliver cost-effective climate change mitigation and human development2,3,4,5. However, most REDD+ analysis has used coarse-scale data, overlooked important opportunity costs to tropical forest users4,5 and failed to consider how to best invest funds to limit leakage, that is, merely displacing deforestation6. Here we examine these issues for Tanzania, a REDD+ country, by comparing district-scale carbon losses from deforestation with the opportunity costs of carbon conservation. Opportunity costs are estimated as rents from both agriculture and charcoal production (the most important proximate causes of regional forest conversion7,8,9). As an alternative we also calculate the implementation costs of alleviating the demand for forest conversion—thereby addressing the problem of leakage—by raising agricultural yields on existing cropland and increasing charcoal fuel-use efficiency. The implementation costs exceed the opportunity costs of carbon conservation (medians of US$6.50 versus US$3.90 per Mg CO2), so effective REDD+ policies may cost more than simpler estimates suggest. However, even if agricultural yields are doubled, implementation is possible at the competitive price of ∼US$12 per Mg CO2.

Cite this article

Fisher, B., Lewis, S., Burgess, N. et al. Implementation and opportunity costs of reducing deforestation and forest degradation in Tanzania. Nature Clim Change 1, 161–164 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1038/nclimate1119

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