I am thinking about the consequences of no-forestation policies, called for by a range of environmental groups such as Greenpeace and TFT, and what this could mean for development in forested regions? If forest areas of the world (Canada, Russia, Brazil, DRC, PNG etc.) are not allowed through international pressure to cut down their forests, and especially so in poorer regions in the tropics, how can development take place? Are there examples of good development, healthy, well fed, happy people in forest areas where no deforestation has ever taken place? I cannot think of any such examples. If these examples do not exist, then current calls for no-deforestation sound rather hollow in terms of commitment to other sustainability goals, such as alleviating poverty, reducing hunger, providing education and giving people equitable treatment. The Sustainable Development Goal's motto of leaving no one behind would become problematic if some were forced behind. What am I missing ?

More Erik Meijaard's questions See All
Similar questions and discussions