Addressing indirect sourcing in zero deforestation commodity supply chains

Author:

zu Ermgassen Erasmus K. H. J.12ORCID,Bastos Lima Mairon G.3ORCID,Bellfield Helen4,Dontenville Adeline5ORCID,Gardner Toby3ORCID,Godar Javier3ORCID,Heilmayr Robert6ORCID,Indenbaum Rosa3ORCID,dos Reis Tiago N. P.14ORCID,Ribeiro Vivian3,Abu Itohan-osa7,Szantoi Zoltan89ORCID,Meyfroidt Patrick12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Georges Lemaître Earth and Climate Research Centre, Earth and Life Institute, UCLouvain, Bâtiment Mercator, Place Louis Pasteur 3, B-1348 Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium.

2. Fonds de la Recherche Scientifique F. R. S.-FNRS, Rue d’Egmont 5, B-1000 Brussels, Belgium.

3. Stockholm Environment Institute, Linnégatan 87D, 115 23 Stockholm, Sweden.

4. Global Canopy, 3 Frewin Court, Oxford OX1 3HZ, UK.

5. European Forest Institute, Sant Pau Historic site, Sant Leopold Pavillon, St. Antoni M. Claret, 167, 08025 Barcelona, Spain.

6. Environmental Studies Program and Bren School of Environmental Science, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, USA.

7. Julius-Maximilians-University of Würzburg, Institute for Geography and Geology, Department of Remote Sensing, Oswald-Külpe-Weg 86, 97074 Würzburg, Germany.

8. European Space Agency, Directorate of EO Programmes, Science, Applications and Climate Department, Frascati 00044, Italy.

9. Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch 7602, South Africa.

Abstract

The trade in agricultural commodities is a backbone of the global economy but is a major cause of negative social and environmental impacts, not least deforestation. Commodity traders are key actors in efforts to eliminate deforestation—they are active in the regions where commodities are produced and represent a “pinch point” in global trade that provides a powerful lever for change. However, the procurement strategies of traders remain opaque. Here, we catalog traders’ sourcing across four sectors with high rates of commodity-driven deforestation: South American soy, cocoa from Côte d’Ivoire, Indonesian palm oil, and Brazilian live cattle exports. We show that traders often source more than 40% of commodities “indirectly” via local intermediaries and that indirect sourcing is a major blind spot for sustainable sourcing initiatives. To eliminate deforestation, indirect sourcing must be included in sectoral initiatives, and landscape or jurisdictional approaches, which internalize indirect sourcing, must be scaled up.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference91 articles.

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5. Directorate-General for Environment “Proposal for a regulation on deforestation-free products” (2021); https://ec.europa.eu/environment/publications/proposal-regulation-deforestation-free-products_en.

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