Impact of land tenure on deforestation control and forest restoration in Brazilian Amazonia

Author:

Camara GilbertoORCID,Simoes Rolf,Ruivo Heloisa M,Andrade Pedro R,Soterroni Aline C,Ramos Fernando M,Ramos Rafael GORCID,Scarabello Marluce,Almeida Claudio,Sanches Ieda,Maurano Luis,Coutinho Alexandre,Esquerdo Julio,Antunes João,Venturieri Adriano,Adami MarcosORCID

Abstract

Abstract This study examines how land tenure constrains Brazil’s ability to meet its deforestation control and forest restoration goals in its Amazonia biome. Our findings are based on an updated assessment of land tenure and land use in the region. Between 2019 and 2021, 44% of deforestation in Amazonia occurred in private lands, while forest removal in settlements ranged from 31% to 27% of the total. Deforestation in undesignated public lands increased from 11% in 2008 to 18% in 2021. Deforestation is highly concentrated, with 1% of properties accounting for 82.5% of forest cuts in 2021. In Amazonia, there is considerable non-compliance with the legal reserve provisions set by Brazil’s Forest Code. Legal reserve deficits in private lands sum up to 18.17 Mha (million hectares), compared with 12.49 Mha of legal reserve surpluses. Even if all forest surpluses are offered in the forest credits market set in the Forest Code, farmers still need to restore 5.67 Mha to comply with the law. Large-scale cattle ranchers have a legal reserve deficit of 10.35 Mha (34% of their area). Most crop farming occurs in medium and large properties (4.63 Mha) with a large proportion of legal reserve deficits (45%). Given the political power and financial resources of large ranchers and crop producers, Brazil faces major challenges in inducing these farmers to meet their legal obligations. Therefore, Brazil needs to combine robust command-and-control strategies with market-based policies to achieve its deforestation and forest restoration goals. The government should tailor forest protection and restoration policies to the needs of different landowners, considering their land use practices, technical capacity, and financial resources.

Funder

International Climate Initiative, Government of Germany

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

Fundo Amazônia

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Environmental Science,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment

Reference36 articles.

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4. Solving Brazil’s land use puzzle: increasing production and slowing Amazon deforestation;Stabile;Land Use Policy,2020

5. Lula vows to undo environmental degradation and halt deforestation;Greenfield,2022

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