4.7 Article

Carbon payments can cost-effectively improve logging sustainability in the Amazon

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 314, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.115094

Keywords

Selective logging; Carbon; Biodiversity; REDD plus; Tropical forest; Amazon; Forest degradation

Funding

  1. AMATA
  2. Jari Florestal logging companies
  3. Servico Florestal Brasileiro (Brazilian Forest Service)
  4. Natural Environment Research Council [NE-S00713X-1]
  5. NERC [NE/S00713X/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Selective logging is widespread in tropical regions, causing depletion of forest biodiversity and carbon stocks. Carbon payments can protect forests from degradation, but their feasibility in the Amazon is uncertain. A study finds that a relatively low carbon price can effectively safeguard large tracts of the Amazon rainforest and provide cost-effective opportunities for protection.
Selective logging is pervasive across the tropics and unsustainable logging depletes forest biodiversity and carbon stocks. Improving the sustainability of logging will be crucial for meeting climate targets. Carbon-based payment for ecosystem service schemes, including REDD+, give economic value to standing forests and can protect them from degradation, but only if the revenue from carbon payments is greater than the opportunity cost of forgone or reduced logging. We currently lack understanding of whether carbon payments are feasible for protecting Amazonian forests from logging, despite the Amazon holding the largest unexploited timber reserves and an expanding logging sector. Using financial data and inventories of > 660,000 trees covering 52,000 ha of Brazilian forest concessions, we estimate the carbon price required to protect forests from logging. We estimate that a carbon price of $7.90 per tCO(2) is sufficient to match the opportunity costs of all logging and fund protection of primary forest. Alternatively, improving the sustainability of logging operations by ensuring a greater proportion of trees are left uncut requires only slightly higher investments of $7.97-10.45 per tCO(2). These prices fall well below the current compliance market rate and demonstrate a cost-effective opportunity to safeguard large tracts of the Amazon rainforest from further degradation.

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