Land‐use change from market responses to oil palm intensification in Indonesia

Author:

Lim Felix K. S.123ORCID,Carrasco Luis Roman4ORCID,Edwards David P.135ORCID,McHardy Jolian16

Affiliation:

1. Grantham Centre for Sustainable Futures University of Sheffield Sheffield UK

2. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew Richmond UK

3. Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, School of Biosciences University of Sheffield Sheffield UK

4. Department of Biological Sciences National University of Singapore Singapore

5. Department of Plant Sciences and Conservation Research Institute University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

6. Department of Economics University of Sheffield Sheffield UK

Abstract

AbstractOil palm is a major driver of tropical deforestation. A key intervention proposed to reduce the footprint of oil palm is intensifying production to free up spare land for nature, yet the indirect land‐use implications of intensification through market forces are poorly understood. We used a spatially explicit land‐rent modeling framework to characterize the supply and demand of oil palm in Indonesia under multiple yield improvement and demand elasticity scenarios and explored how shifts in market equilibria alter projections of crop expansion. Oil palm supply was sensitive to crop prices and yield improvements. Across all our scenarios, intensification raised agricultural rents and lowered the effectiveness of reductions in crop expansion. Increased yields lowered oil palm prices, but these price‐drops were not sufficient to prevent further cropland expansion from increased agricultural rents under a range of price elasticities of demand. Crucially, we found that agricultural intensification might only result in land being spared when the demand relationship was highly inelastic and crop prices were very low (i.e., a 70% price reduction). Under this scenario, the extent of land spared (∼0.32 million ha) was countered by the continued establishment of new plantations (∼1.04 million ha). Oil palm intensification in Indonesia could exacerbate current pressures on its imperiled biodiversity and should be deployed with stronger spatial planning and enforcement to prevent further cropland expansion.

Funder

Grantham Centre for Sustainable Futures

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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