Article

Tree plantations and forest regrowth are linked to poverty reduction in Africa

Details

Citation

den Braber B, Hall CM, Rhemtulla JM, Fagan ME & Rasmusssen LV (2024) Tree plantations and forest regrowth are linked to poverty reduction in Africa. Communications Earth & Environment, 5, Art. No.: 724. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-024-01845-2

Abstract
Numerous countries have adopted large-scale tree planting programs as a climate mitigation strategy and to improve local livelihoods. However, it remains poorly documented how the surge in tree plantations has altered local livelihoods. Here, we assess whether tropical tree plantation expansion and forest regrowth across 18 African countries are associated with local people’s living standards. By combining a recent map that distinguishes tree plantations from regrowth from 2000 to 2012 with multidimensional poverty measures from more than 200,000 households, we find a positive association between people's living standards and areas where tree plantations have expanded or, to a lesser extent, forest regrowth has occurred. Because tree plantations make up a large proportion of recent increases in tropical tree cover – and controversy remains about their potential impacts on both biodiversity and local people – our study provides broad empirical support for the idea that tree plantations and forest regrowth can be linked with reduced poverty in the short term.

Journal
Communications Earth & Environment: Volume 5

StatusPublished
FundersEuropean Commission (Horizon 2020)
Publication date online30/11/2024
Date accepted by journal25/10/2024
PublisherSpringer Science and Business Media LLC
ISSN2662-4435
eISSN2662-4435

People (1)

Dr Charlotte Hall

Dr Charlotte Hall

Lecturer in Environmental Geography, Biological and Environmental Sciences

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