Socioeconomic impacts of tree plantations overwhelmingly negative for local people
- From
-
Published on
24.12.18
- Impact Area

Uruguay – The results are dispiriting, if not unsurprising: a systematic review of the available literature has found that the socioeconomic impacts of large-scale tree plantations have been mostly negative for local people.
Intensively managed, large-scale tree monocultures now make up roughly 1 percent of global forests (if you consider them true forests, which many people do not) From this relatively small area, they supply around one-third of the world’s industrial round wood.
See the rest of the story at forestsnews.org
Related:
Wild meat for today and tomorrow
Recognition of indigenous territories as a REDD+ strategy: An example from the Peruvian Amazon
Forests in the global bio-economy: Lessons from Indonesia and Brazil
Related news
-
Q&A with Marleen Schutter, Post Doctoral Fellow in Aquatic Food Systems
WorldFish07.06.24-
Biodiversity
-
Environmental health
-
Environmental health & biodiversity
This World Oceans Day, we're highlighting the blue economy and its potential to foster sustainable…
Read more -
-
Exploring the Vital Role of Soil Health in Multifunctional Landscapes
International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT)30.04.24-
Climate adaptation & mitigation
-
Environmental health
ICRISAT and The Nature Conservancy to Convene Side Event at Africa Fertilizer and Soil Health…
Read more -
-
Soils4Africa workshop: Madagascar youth learn soil information system tools
International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA)17.04.24-
Environmental health
The goal of the Soils4Africa project is to develop an open-access soil information system and…
Read more -