Energy & Science

How Fighting Poverty Accidentally Stopped Deforestation

Evidence from Indonesia shows that development goals don’t have to come at a cost to the climate.

A truck loaded with logs in the Penajam area of Borneo, Indonesia.

Photographer: Dimas Ardian/Bloomberg
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Forest destruction is responsible for 10% of human carbon dioxide emissions, and much of it is the result of extreme poverty. For local communities, selling timber and clearing land for cultivation is an income stream of last resort. Researchers, governments, and non-governmental organizations have debated for years how to rid the world of these twin scourges. But which comes first, alleviating the poverty or saving the trees?

Data from an Indonesian anti-poverty program that began in 2007 provided researchers a natural way to answer that question. The result: Cash payments to people in impoverished areas led to a 30% drop in tree loss, even though the payments came with no conservation conditions.