A confirmation of the indirect impact of sugarcane on deforestation in the Amazon

被引:0
|
作者
Jusys, Tomas [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Balearic Isl, Dept Appl Econ, Cra Valldemossa,Km 7-5, Palma De Mallorca, Balearic Island, Spain
关键词
Deforestation; sugarcane; Brazil; indirect land use change; LAND-USE; BRAZILIAN AMAZON; ETHANOL-PRODUCTION; SOCIAL IMPACTS; SOY PRODUCTION; SPARING LAND; EXPANSION; BIOFUELS; EMISSIONS; INTENSIFICATION;
D O I
10.1080/1747423X.2017.1291766
中图分类号
S [农业科学];
学科分类号
09 ;
摘要
A widely discussed assumption that the expansion of sugarcane indirectly contributes to deforestation in Brazil has been backed statistically by only a handful of studies. The present research measures the indirect effect of sugarcane in Brazil's frontier counties as a weighted summation of changes in sugarcane area in agricultural (non-frontier) counties, where weights are constructed using road distances and the bandwidth that minimizes overall model error. In addition to economic variables, indirect effect variables are employed to create a model that explains deforestation. Parameters are estimated following fixed-effects methodology. The results reveal that sugarcane indirectly contributed to deforestation in Brazil during the period from 2002 to 2012. The effect was estimated to be sizeable; in particular, 16.3 thousand km(2) of forest was cut by economic actors displaced by expanding sugarcane plantations. This figure constitutes 12.2% of deforestation in Brazil from 2002 to 2012 and is equivalent to 189.4 million Mg of carbon emissions.
引用
收藏
页码:125 / 137
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The Impact of Deforestation on Malaria Infections in the Brazilian Amazon
    Santos, Augusto Seabra
    Almeida, Alexandre N.
    ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS, 2018, 154 : 247 - 256
  • [2] Statistical confirmation of indirect land use change in the Brazilian Amazon
    Arima, Eugenio Y.
    Richards, Peter
    Walker, Robert
    Caldas, Marcellus M.
    ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2011, 6 (02):
  • [3] What Drives Indirect Land Use Change? How Brazil's Agriculture Sector Influences Frontier Deforestation
    Richards, Peter
    ANNALS OF THE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN GEOGRAPHERS, 2015, 105 (05) : 1026 - 1040
  • [4] Impact of foot-and-mouth disease status on deforestation in Brazilian Amazon and cerrado municipalities between 2000 and 2010
    Bowman, Maria S.
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS AND MANAGEMENT, 2016, 75 : 25 - 40
  • [5] Deforestation territories in the Amazon. Geographical analyze in the state of Para.
    Poccard-Chapuis, Rene
    Thales, Marcelo Cordeiro
    Pecanha, Jaqueline De Carvalho
    Piketty, Marie-Gabrielle
    CONFINS-REVUE FRANCO-BRESILIENNE DE GEOGRAPHIE-REVISTA FRANCO-BRASILEIRA DE GEOGRAFIA, 2020, 48
  • [6] Taking the Bitter with the Sweet: Sugarcane's Return as a Driver of Tropical Deforestation
    Obidzinski, Krystof
    Kusters, Koen
    Gnych, Sophia
    CONSERVATION LETTERS, 2015, 8 (06): : 449 - 455
  • [7] Predictors of deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon
    Laurance, WF
    Albernaz, AKM
    Schroth, G
    Fearnside, PM
    Bergen, S
    Venticinque, EM
    Da Costa, C
    JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2002, 29 (5-6) : 737 - 748
  • [8] Is deforestation accelerating in the Brazilian Amazon?
    Laurance, WF
    Albernaz, AKM
    Da Costa, C
    ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION, 2001, 28 (04) : 305 - 311
  • [9] Deforestation and the Social Impacts of Soy for Biodiesel: Perspectives of Farmers in the South Brazilian Amazon
    Lima, Mendelson
    Skutsch, Margaret
    de Medeiros Costa, Gerlane
    ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY, 2011, 16 (04):
  • [10] Deforestation in the Amazon: A Unified Framework for Estimation and Policy Analysis
    Souza-Rodrigues, Eduardo
    REVIEW OF ECONOMIC STUDIES, 2019, 86 (06) : 2713 - 2744