Morton, O., Borah, J.R. and Edwards, D.P. (2020) Economically viable forest restoration in shifting cultivation landscapes. Environmental Research Letters, 15 (6). 064017.
Abstract
Shifting cultivation is a predominant land use across the tropics, feeding hundreds of millions of marginalised people, causing significant deforestation, and encompassing a combined area of land ten-fold greater than that used for oil palm and rubber. A key question is whether carbon-based payment for ecosystem services (PES) schemes can cost-effectively bring novel restoration and carbon-sensitive management practices to shifting agriculture. Using economic models that uniquely consider the substantial area of fallow land needed to support a single cultivated plot, we calculated the break-even carbon prices required for PES to match the opportunity cost of intervention in shifting agriculture. We do so in the North-east Indian biodiversity hotspot, where 35.4% of land is managed under shifting agriculture. We found net revenues of US$829.53–2581.95 per 30 ha when fallow area is included, which are an order of magnitude lower than previous estimates. Abandoning shifting agriculture entirely is highly feasible with break-even prices as low as US$1.33 t−1 CO2, but may conflict with food security. The oldest fallow plots could be fully restored for US$0.89 t−1 CO2 and the expansion of shifting agriculture into primary forest halted for US$0.51 t−1 CO2, whereas abandoning short-fallow systems would cost US$12.60 t−1 CO2. A precautionary reanalysis accounting for extreme economic uncertainty and leakage costs suggests that all interventions, excluding abandoning short-fallow systems, remain economically viable with prices less than US$4.00 t−1 CO2. Even with poorly formed voluntary carbon markets, shifting agriculture represents a critical opportunity for low-cost forest restoration whilst diversifying income streams of marginalised communities across a vast area.
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Copyright, Publisher and Additional Information: | © 2020 The Authors. Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI. | ||||
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Institution: | The University of Sheffield | ||||
Academic Units: | The University of Sheffield > Faculty of Science (Sheffield) > School of Biological Sciences (Sheffield) > Department of Animal and Plant Sciences (Sheffield) | ||||
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Depositing User: | Symplectic Sheffield | ||||
Date Deposited: | 22 Jun 2020 10:29 | ||||
Last Modified: | 22 Jun 2020 10:29 | ||||
Status: | Published | ||||
Publisher: | IOP Publishing | ||||
Refereed: | Yes | ||||
Identification Number: | https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ab7f0d |
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Filename: Morton et al. 2020.pdf
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