Complementary Perspectives and Metrics Are Essential to End Deforestation
Journal article, 2025

Recent public and private policies seek to end deforestation by regulating the production and trade of forest-risk commodities. The design, implementation, and evaluation of these policies rely on metrics that are typically bounded in scope by either territories or supply chains, and therefore only provide a partial account of deforestation on the ground. We argue that metrics linking deforestation and forest degradation to commodity production need to consider two distinct questions: (1) How much of today's commodity production is associated with past deforestation? and (2) to what extent is today's deforestation driven by the prospects of producing a specific commodity in the future? This paper describes how metrics can respond to these questions by being classified according to their commodity or deforestation focus. We propose common terminology to facilitate the communication and use of these perspectives and metrics. We then make the case for combining perspectives through the monitoring and reporting of multiple metrics by governments, companies, and non-governmental organizations alike to both assess progress and drive more coordinated action to reduce deforestation.

metrics

land use change

policy

territory

trade

geography

supply chains

Author

Michael J. Lathuillière

Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI)

T. A. Gardner

Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI)

Martin Persson

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Physical Resource Theory

Vivian Ribeiro

Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI)

Robert Heilmayr

University of California

Florence Pendrill

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Physical Resource Theory

P. Meyfroidt

National Fund for Scientific Research

Universite catholique de Louvain

Conservation Letters

1755263x (eISSN)

Vol. 18 5 e13145

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Economics

DOI

10.1111/conl.13145

More information

Latest update

10/2/2025