4.5 Article

Lowering environmental costs of oil-palm expansion in Colombia

Journal

CONSERVATION LETTERS
Volume 5, Issue 5, Pages 366-375

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1755-263X.2012.00254.x

Keywords

Biomass carbon; conservation; land-use planning; scenario analysis; tropical deforestation

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Colombia is the fifth largest producer of palm oil in the world. The country's government and oil-palm farmers association target a sixfold increase of crude palm-oil production by 2020. We model the impacts of expanding oil-palm agriculture in Colombia through a spatially explicit scenario analysis. We demonstrate that the impacts of oil-palm expansion (e.g., deforestation, conversion of natural savannahs) would be minimized by establishing new plantations on pasture lands, given the low environmental value and economic utility, and the high agricultural potential of this land use. Impacts of oil-palm expansion on beef and dairy production could be compensated by improving productivity of pasture lands elsewhere. However, the profitability of oil-palm production in these areas might suffer over the long term due to high land purchase costs.

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