|




 |
How to Save Tropical
Rainforests
Today tropical rainforests
are disappearing from the
face of the globe. Despite
growing international
concern, rainforests
continue to be destroyed at
a pace
exceeding 80,000 acres
(32,000 hectares) per day.
World rainforest cover now
stands at around 2.5 million
square miles (6 million
square kilometers), an area
about the size of the
contiguous 48 United States
or Australia and
representing around 5
percent of the world's land
surface. Much of this
remaining area has been
impacted by human activities
and no longer retains its
full original biodiversity.
Deforestation of tropical
rainforests has a
global impact through
species extinction, the loss
of important ecosystem
services and renewable
resources, and the reduction
of carbon sinks. However,
this destruction can be
slowed, stopped, and in some
cases even reversed. Most
people agree that the
problem must be remedied,
but the means are not as
simple as fortifying fences
around the remaining
rainforests or banning the
timber trade. Economic,
political, and social
pressures will not allow
rainforests to persist if
they are completely closed
off from use and development
So, what should be done? The
solution must be based on
what is feasible, not overly
idealistic, and depends on
developing a new
conservation policy built on
the principle of sustainable
use and development of
rainforests. Beyond the
responsible development of
rainforests, efforts to
rehabilitate and restore
degraded forest lands along
with the establishment of
protected areas are key to
securing rainforests for the
long-term benefits they can
provide mankind.
Past efforts
Historic approaches to
rainforest conservation have
failed, as demonstrated by
the accelerated rate of
deforestation. In many
regions, closing off forests
as untouchable parks and
reserves has neither
improved the quality of
living or economic
opportunities for rural poor
nor deterred forest clearing
by illegal loggers and
developers. Corruption has
only worsened the situation.
The problem with this
traditional park approach to
preserving wild lands in
developing countries is that
it fails to generate
sufficient economic
incentives for respecting
and maintaining the forest.
Rainforests will only
continue to survive as
functional ecosystems if
they can be shown to provide
tangible economic benefits.
Local people and the
government itself must see
financial returns to justify
the costs of maintaining
parks and forgoing revenue
from economic activities
within the boundaries of the
protected area.
Limited resources
Countries with significant
rainforest cover are
generally among the world's
poorest. As such, people's
day-to-day survival is
dependent upon
natural-resource use. Most
local people living in and
around forests never have an
option to become a doctor,
sports star, factory worker,
or secretary; they must live
off the land that surrounds
them, making use of whatever
resources they can find.
Their poverty costs
themselves, their country,
and the world through the
loss of biodiversity and
ecosystem services like
erosion prevention, flood
control, water treatment,
and fisheries protection.
Governments in these
countries are in the
unenviable position of
having to balance the
well-being of rural poor
with the interests of
industry, demands from
foreign governments, and
requirements from the
international aid community.
In this climate, it can be
easier to simply neglect the
continued destruction and
degradation of environmental
assets than to come up with
a long-term plan to ensure
that economic development is
ecologically sustainable.
Success in conserving
wildlands in these countries
will require reconciling the
inevitable conflicts between
short-term needs of local
people and the long-term
nature of the benefits that
conservation can generate on
a sustainable, ongoing
basis.
Forces Behind Rainforest
Loss
Rainforests are being cut
mostly for economic reasons,
though there are political
and social motivations as
well. A significant portion
of deforestation is caused
by poor farmers simply
trying to eke out a living
on marginal lands. Beyond
conversion for subsistence
agriculture, activities like
logging, clearing for cattle
pasture and commercial
agriculture are sizeable
contributors to
deforestation on a global
scale. Agricultural fires
typically used for
land-clearing are
increasingly spreading
outside cultivated areas and
into degraded rainforest
regions.
Addressing deforestation
Addressing deforestation
will need to take the very
different needs and
interests of these groups
into account.
Poor farmers:
Poor farmers are simply
trying to put food on the
table for their families.
A better approach to
addressing the needs of
the rural poor may be
improving and intensifying
currently existing
agricultural projects and
promoting alternative
cultivation
techniques—notably
permaculture. Permaculture
adds a mix of crops to the
farmer's palette that both
enables him to diversify
his income stream and
enhance degraded soils by
restoring nutrients. An
added benefit of such
techniques is that they
maintain forest systems,
soils, and biological
diversity at a far higher
level than do conventional
agricultural approaches.
As long as such fields are
adjacent to secondary and
old-growth forest, many
species will continue to
thrive.
A second important part of
aiding poor farmers is
helping them gain formal
title to their land. Right
now, in places where it is
difficult to gain
ownership rights to land
and where land is
relatively open and
abundant, there is little
incentive to maintain or
improve holdings. Once
local people have a stake
in the land they are
farming, they will have an
interest in using it
efficiently instead of
moving on to a new area of
forest once soils are
prematurely exhausted.
The creation of credit
facilities for poor
farmers to both save their
earnings and borrow in
times of need is also
important to improving
their quality of life.
Micro-credit facilities
can provide significant
economic benefits to the
local economy while
bringing dignity to and
promoting entrepreneurship
among local people.
Finally, improved access
to markets is important in
enabling farmers to get
their agricultural
products. Improved access
can be a doubled-edged
sword if it means
increased road-building,
which often spurs further
deforestation. Any
infrastructure
improvements should be
carefully planned to
minimize the future impact
on remaining ecosystems.
Industrial/commercial
developers:
Thus far it has proved
difficult to apply the
same permaculture
agricultural techniques
mentioned above to
industrial operations. As
currently practiced,
large-scale agriculture is
typically quite
destructive of native
ecosystems and does not
maintain biodiversity at
levels commensurate with
adjacent forest areas.
Incremental steps like the
use of natural pest
control and fertilizers
can help reduce pollution
caused by agricultural
operations, while leaving
strips of forest as
corridors linking sections
of forest helps moderate
biodiversity losses.
Sustainable logging, while
possible, has met
resistance from the timber
industry for its lack of
efficiency relative to
traditional harvesting
methods, and it remains
controversial among
conservationists as to the
impact on the environment.
Illegal logging and
counterfeit labeling are
major obstacles facing
sustainable forest
management for timber, but
in time the development of
higher yielding timber
plantations will help
alleviate pressures on
natural forests.
Restoring and
rehabilitating ecosystems
There is no use bemoaning
past deforestation of large
areas. Today the concern is
how to best utilize lands
already cleared so they
support productive
activities, now and for
future generations. Without
improving the well-being of
people living in and around
forests, we cannot expect
rainforests to persist as
fully functional systems and
continue to cater to our
needs.
In addressing
environmental problems in
rainforest countries, it is
important that decision
makers not only be concerned
with the transformation of
existing natural ecosystems,
but also the more rational
utilization of already
cleared and degraded areas.
To lessen future forest
loss, we must increase and
sustain the productivity of
farms, pastures,
plantations, and scrub land
in addition to restoring
species and ecosystems to
degraded habitats. By
reducing wasteful land-use
practices, consolidating
gains on existing cleared
lands, and improving already
developed lands, we can
diminish the need to clear
additional forest.
Research and experience has
shown that the restoration
of entire ecosystems is most
possible in regions where
parts or at least remnants
of the original forest still
remain and there are few
human population pressures.
Small clearings surrounded
by forest recover quickly,
and large sections may
recover in time, especially
if some assistance in the
reforestation process is
provided. After several
years, a once-barren field
can again support vegetation
in the form of pioneer
species and secondary
growth. Although the
secondary forest will be low
in diversity and poorly
developed, the forest cover
will be adequate for some
species to return (assuming
they still exist). In
addition, the newly forested
patch can be used for the
sustainable harvest of
forest products and
low-intensity logging and
agriculture.
Funding rainforest
conservation efforts
Conservation efforts and
sustainable development
programs are not going to be
cost-free. Even countries
that already get
considerable aid from
foreign donors have trouble
effectively making such
initiatives work in the long
term. Since handouts, which
in and of themselves have
the tendency to breed
dependency, are not going to
last forever, funding these
initiatives may require more
creative sources of income
to be truly successful. Here
are some other funding
strategies for
consideration:
- Ecotourism—Ecotourism
can fund efforts both
through park entrance fees
and employing locals as
guides and in the
handicraft and service
sectors (hotels,
restaurants, drivers, boat
drivers, porters, cooks).
- Bio-prospecting
fees—Rainforest
countries can earn revenue
by allowing scientists to
develop products from the
island's native plant and
animal species. The
pioneer in this area was
Costa Rica, which entered
into an agreement with the
American pharmaceutical
company, Merck, to look
for plants with potential
pharmaceutical
applications. Under the
agreement, a portion of
the proceeds from
compounds that do prove
commercially valuable will
go to the Costa Rican
government, which has
guaranteed that some of
the royalties will be set
aside for conservation
projects. Similarly, in
2001 Givaudan, a Swiss
fragrance and flavor
company, sent a team to
look for new exotic smells
and flavors in Madagascar.
Following their survey,
Givaudan researchers
"reconstituted" 40 aromas
that could be used in
commercial products. The
company has agreed to
share a portion of the
profits from these
products with local
communities through
conservation and
development initiatives.
- Carbon credits—For
setting aside forest for
the purpose of atmospheric
carbon mitigation,
developing countries can
receive payments from
industrialized countries
looking to offset their
carbon emissions.
Carbon-offset programs are
popular in many circles,
since they can "provide a
mechanism for motivating
wealthy countries to pay
for a benefit of forest
conservation that
transcends national
borders." In effect, such
programs promote "the
transfer of funds from
industrialized countries
to tropical countries as a
commercial transaction
rather than an act of
charity" (Costa, P.M.
"Tropical forestry
practices for carbon
sequestration: a review
and case study from
Southeast Asia," Ambio
Vol. 25 No. 4, June
1996)).
- Corporate
sponsorship—Corporations
have been a bit slow in
"adopting" parks, but they
have the money and a
marketing-driven interest
in taking a closer look at
such schemes. See below
for more details on a
potential plan.
- The
Linden-Lovejoy-Phillips
plan—One interesting
idea proposed by Eugene
Linden, Thomas Lovejoy,
and J. Daniel Phillips for
tropical rainforests
consists of dividing
natural areas into blocks
and then soliciting
funding commitments from
international
environmental groups,
development institutions,
corporations, and other
credible donors. There
would be a bidding
process, after which an
entity would take
responsibility for
maintaining forest cover
and forest health in each
block of the entire forest
system. This plan could be
a road for corporations to
become involved in
conservation as a
public-relations/marketing
tool. A given percentage
of the proceeds could be
put into a trust fund with
the payout ear-marked for
ongoing conservation and
sustainable development
programs.
Further steps once
funding is in place
- Expand protected
areas—As many areas
should be protected as
soon as possible. If
protected areas can be
developed in such a manner
to generate income for
local communities, an
increasing number of parks
should theoretically
create more economic
benefits for a greater
share of the population.
- Increase
surveillance of and
patrols in protected areas—This
can be done at a reduced
cost if local communities
benefit from the success
of the park. If locals
have a vested interest
(i.e. are compensated via
entrance fees, hired as
guides, make handicrafts
to sell to tourists, and
learn to value their
ecosystem for the services
it can provide), they will
want to watch the park so
that the source of their
income is not diminished.
Community surveillance is
the most effective way to
patrol a protected area,
though it will probably be
necessary to have park
staff conduct patrols as
well. Guides should be
trained as well to keep
watch for activities that
are damaging to the
ecosystem and report
suspicious activities at
park headquarters.
- Build research
facilities for training
local scientists and
guides—The average
rainforest country needs
to build its intellectual
capital to grow its
economy and make the best
use of the country's
resources. There need to
be further studies on
endemic species (many just
have a name and a location
and new species are being
discovered every year) for
both pure-research reasons
and potential commercial
applications. Improved
crop yields and reduced
erosion could also be
possible with future
research.
- Establish programs
that promote sustainable
use—Programs that
promote sustainable use
are key to elevating the
standard of living for
people living around
protected areas. Not all
members of a community
will see the direct
benefits from employment
in the service or
production sector, and
many people will still
rely on traditional use of
the natural resources
around them. These
resources must be used in
a more effective manner to
maximize productivity and
minimize the impact on the
environment.
- Compensate
displaced people—As
more protected areas are
set aside, it is
inevitable that some
people may be asked to
move. It is important that
these people are
compensated for abandoning
their existing livelihood
and homes. While direct
cash payouts is an option,
a better strategy is
providing these displaced
people with long-term
income possibilities
through training in better
agricultural techniques or
alternative crops.
- Promote ecotourism—Ecotourism
is perhaps the best hope
for developing the economy
of some rainforest
countries. Planners should
seek to minimize the
environmental impact and
maximize the benefits for
local communities.
- Ensure economic
success does not result in
increased deforestation—As
rural populations begin to
reap benefits from
conservation-related
activities, it is
important that they not
reinvest this income in
activities that result in
further deforestation.
Traditionally, in many
villages, the more money
someone made, the more
money was put back into
land clearing. Rural banks
and savings institutions
are virtually unknown in
many parts of the
developing world. Such
facilities, which would
enable both saving and
lending, could rapidly
change the lives of
millions through increased
entrepreneurship and the
ability to put away money
for the future.
- Encourage
entrepreneurship—Encouraging
entrepreneurship through
such a micro-credit
strategy could pay
significant dividends for
a country's economy as a
whole. Studies in
developing countries have
found that entrepreneurial
skills among the poor are
actually quite high when
people are given access to
capital. Default rates are
typically quite low as
well (do the poor have a
greater respect for
money?). Stimulating
entrepreneurship through
small, low-cost loans is
possibly a better approach
than handouts, which may
do little more than breed
dependency and reduce
human dignity.
Looking toward the
future, tough choices
Simply banning the timber
trade or establishing
reserves will not be enough
to salvage the world's
remaining tropical
rainforests. In order for
the forest to be preserved,
the underlying social,
economic, and political
reasons for deforestation
must be recognized and
addressed. Once the issues
are brought into the light,
the decision can be made
about what should be done.
If it is decided that
rainforests must be saved,
then the creation of
multi-use reserves that
promote sustainable
development and education of
local people would be a good
place to start. Currently
about 6 percent of the
world's remaining forests
are protected, meaning that
over 90 percent are still
open for the taking.
However, even this 6 percent
is not safe if the proper
steps towards sustainable
development are not taken.
If possible, reforestation
and restoration projects
should be encouraged if we,
humanity, hope to come out
of this situation without
serious, long-term
consequences.
|