Can’t See The Wood For The Desert
Isaac Rojas looks at the spread of ‘green deserts’
swallowing up vast tracts of the global South
Providers of ‘ecosystem services’, ‘carbon sinks’, sources
of renewable energy, job creators, tax providers, solutions to the climate and
biodiversity crises – these are just some of the positive images of industrial
tree plantations (ITPs) being painted by the private and state interests
pushing for their expansion. Growing and processing trees for profit is a major
and expanding global industry, an industry with a highly destructive face. ITPs
have been the focus of widespread resistance across the global South for
several decades. The reality is that they have a deeply destructive impact on
communities, local economies and biodiversity. They are not a solution to
climate change, nor to biodiversity loss. They cause numerous problems in many
countries, including my own, Costa Rica.
Rise of the monoculture plantation
While ITPs are present in the global North, their recent
expansion has been concentrated in the global South. According to the UN Food
and Agricultural Organisation (FAO), the area of ‘planted forest’ in the South
increased by more than 50 per cent between 1990 and 2010, from 95 million to
153 million hectares. The FAO estimates that a further 40 to 90 million
hectares will be planted by 2030, not including the predicted rapid expansion
of oil palm plantations. The expansion in the South is driven primarily by the
consumption and economic actors of the North. According to Simone Lovera of the
Global Forest Coalition, ‘Plantations form part of an industrial model for the
production of abundant and cheap raw materials that serves as an input for the
economic growth of industrialised countries.’ While China’s footprint is
rapidly growing, the EU and US still consume most of the final products of
ITPs. EU and US corporations, banks and investment funds are the key players
and the main drivers and beneficiaries, attracted by the cheaper land and
labour in the South, weaker environmental regulations and the higher wood
productivity per hectare.
Although the expansion of monoculture tree plantations dates
back to colonial times, the significant rise of ITPs is a relatively recent
phenomenon, dating back to the 1960s and 1970s. Their development was
accelerated by the structural adjustment programmes imposed on countries in the
South by neoliberal international institutions such as the World Bank and
International Monetary Fund. In return for credit, governments were forced to
liberalise their trade regimes and offer incentives and subsidies for
export-oriented activities such as ITPs.
Bad for people, bad for the planet
The expansion of ITPs is wreaking havoc on the environment,
biodiversity and existing communities. Globally around 1.6 billion people rely
on forests for their livelihoods and wellbeing, including 60 million indigenous
people who are entirely dependent upon them for their food, medicines and
building materials. While local communities and indigenous peoples consume tiny
quantities of the end products, they suffer considerably as a direct result of
the plantations and their expansion. Monoculture plantation expansion is a
major driver of land grab, displacing entire communities and denying them their
land and livelihoods. Compared with small-scale agro-forestry and community
forest management, ITPs offer few employment opportunities. The use of cheap
migrant labour and mechanised harvesting and processing results in a
significant reduction in the overall number of livelihoods that can be
sustained by a given area, while those lucky enough to find employment are
vulnerable to precarity and labour rights violations. The expansion of ITPs is
therefore a key driver of a wider process of large-scale impoverishment,
displacement and disenfranchisement, denying people their means of subsistence
and independence, alienating them from their labour and those aspects of their
cultures deeply related to and dependent on the forest, dismembering their
communities, and forcing them into cities in search of highly precarious and
poorly paid employment. The process of establishing and expanding plantations
is also very commonly associated with violence, with community members
suffering repression, torture and even death at the hands of state and private
security forces serving the interests of the plantation owners.
Government policies continue to promote the establishment of
ITPs, and in bigger economies such as Brazil and China the state is often a
part or total owner of companies involved in ITPs. However, the main drivers of
ITP expansion are the private sector and neoliberal multilateral institutions
such as the World Bank. Many of the corporate actors are from the global North,
especially from countries with strong wood-based industries, including Finland,
Sweden, Germany and the US. The Finnish company Jaakko Poyry, for example, is
active in the plantation and pulp sector in 30 countries, with sales of £550
million in 2010.
Other key private sector players and beneficiaries include:
The world’s ‘big six’ pesticide manufacturing corporations –
BASF, Bayer, Dow, Dupont, Monsanto and Syngenta – whose pesticides are heavily
applied to large-scale monoculture tree plantations
Private banks specialising in agribusiness funding,
including the European banks especially important for the pulp and paper and
oil palm sectors
Investment funds from the global North, which are moving
into a more dominant position in the land and forest market
Private financial institutions and players benefiting from
the expansion of carbon and biodiversity trading and offsetting being promoted
under the auspices of international processes such as the UN climate
negotiations
Environmental consultancy firms profiting from the
certification of carbon and ecosystem services necessitated by the expansion of
trading and offsetting schemes
Fossil fuel companies trying to get a foothold in the
expanding global market for so-called ‘biofuels’ and ‘bioenergy’
Big GMO industry players who are testing genetic alterations
aimed at increasing the profitability of ITPs with very little monitoring and
oversight from governments
Multilateral agencies such as the World Bank, its private
arm the International Finance Corporation, and regional development banks are
helping to promote ITP expansion through direct loans and investment and
helping to leverage further private sector finance. Meanwhile ITP corporates
are using their significant financial power to lobby governments and
international processes to guarantee increased profitability and new expansion
opportunities. They have succeeded in getting the FAO and World Bank to define
plantations as forests, as carbon sinks and as providers of ecosystem services,
thereby both undermining and benefiting from global efforts to reduce carbon
emissions to tackle climate change and to mitigate forest and biodiversity
loss.
Together, these interests have ensured that ITPs and their
products form a central part of the destructive, corporate‑led ‘green economy’ agenda increasingly being promoted by governments and UN
agencies. This agenda is just a greenwashed version of the same old unsustainable
neoliberal economic model.
No such thing as a better plantation
The destruction wrought by monoculture ITPs will not be
solved by monitoring and certification schemes. Such schemes serve only to
legitimise the plantations and facilitate their further expansion.
To stop the destruction we need multiple changes, including
efforts to promote community management of forests; to halt the perverse
support that our governments give to the ITP sector; to secure recognition and
protection of the land rights and territories of indigenous and traditional
peoples; to promote food sovereignty – the right to sufficient, nutritious,
healthy, ecologically-produced and culturally adequate food; and to tackle the
excessive and unsustainable consumption of forest products such as pulp and
paper by the North.
Affected communities across the global South are putting
their lives at risk to claim their rights and protect and reclaim their forests
from plantation expansion. They need solidarity from activists and social movements
around the world, as well as our efforts to change the dysfunctional economic
system and power relations at the heart of this and many other environmental
problems.
Isaac Rojas is coordinator of Friends of the Earth
International’s forest and biodiversity programme, based in Costa Rica
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