Deforestation and Shade Coffee in Oaxaca, Mexico ALLEN BLACKMAN, HEIDI ALBERS, BEATRIZ ẤVALOS-SARTORIO, AND LISA CROOKS.

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Presentation transcript:

Deforestation and Shade Coffee in Oaxaca, Mexico ALLEN BLACKMAN, HEIDI ALBERS, BEATRIZ ẤVALOS-SARTORIO, AND LISA CROOKS

Introduction –preserve forest –cover shade coffee farms –harbor biodiversity –sequester carbon –aquifer recharge crisis had forced shade coffee growers to migrate to cities to find employment

Introduction Three-quarters of Mexico’s coffee is grown on small plots –preserve forest –cover shade coffee farms –harbor biodiversity –sequester carbon –aquifer recharge Explore causes of deforestation to design more efficient and effective policies Shade coffee areas being deforested –ecological services are being lost –coffee crisis—the steep decline of international coffee prices –crisis had forced shade coffee growers to migrate to cities to find employment –encroachment by conventional farmers, ranchers, and loggers Resources for the Future (RFF) – 3 year research

Study Area Sierra Sury Costa = 20% of Mexico’s Coffee production Study Area –254,000-hectare –400–1,600 meters above sea level (msl) –1,155 towns –43 municipios Process –Cultivation –Assisted picking –Transport –Sold to middlemen/ Co-ops –Transport –2 large coffee market towns Clearing of land provides timber and area for subsistence crops –Suffer from heavy erosion Poor enforcement of land clearing

Findings 1.Factors explaining the deforestation before coffee crisis in 1993 Shifting agriculture Low prices from coffee yields High cost of production esp. transportation cost Remoteness from cooperative organization, center of infrastructure, goods & services, markets Lower latitude and not north- facing areas: more sunlight for conventional crops and accessible path to coffee markets 2. Difference of patterns of deforestation between coffee range and off-coffee range before 1993 Less deforestation within the coffee range Within the coffee range, deforestation occurs near the north-facing path suggesting struggles to accessible key coffee markets

Findings 3.How much deforestations have occurred in the coffee range after the coffee crisis ( )? Within study area II net loss of forest cover is 3% or 8,000 hectares along the north-facing roads Reforestations occur along the west of plantation Average annual rate of deforestation during ( ) within Study Area II is 0.4. (compared to the rate of deforestation for all Mexican forest is 1.1% during the 90’s) 4.Factors explaining deforestations occurred in the coffee range after the coffee crisis ( )? Near cities: A)the declining prices of coffee, thus causing abandonment when farmers seek for alternative income in the cities. B) abandoned farms are subject to conventional crop cultivation requiring deforestation No hypothesis for the findings on the steep mountainsides

Findings 5. Factors explaining abandonment farmers have limited accumulated wealth; (they are poor) farmers have limited access to credit; coffee prices are highly variable; prices, yields, or both are so low that farmers lose money if they harvest; or prices, yields, or both are so low that farmers find it difficult to meet subsistence levels. Measures to prevent the abandonment Credits given to farmers to enable them to maintain the coffee shade growing during the hard times of low price Price Premium Price Floor Agricultural activities Policies should be implemented immediately after the price shock

Conclusion Coffee crisis has led to significant deforestation Promoting shade coffee should preserve forest cover Promoting coffee marketing cooperatives should help to slow deforestation Indigenous areas may be good targets for policies aimed at slowing deforestation Investments that reduce transportation costs will likely have countervailing impacts on deforestation Policies that enables coffee farmers to harvest and to perform maintenance on their plantations Policies aimed at preventing abandonment

Suggestions & Comments Question policy of promoting producers to continue to commit to a highly volatile crop that is highly dependant on supports and has relatively poor infrastructure Question the use of price supports (inefficiency effects) along with credit which in the puts the producer at greater risk in the longer run –Suggest the utilization of financial derivatives to better mitigate risk rather than inefficient price supports Depending on the efficiency of the tax revenue department, perhaps differential taxation based on method of farming can also be used to promote shaded cultivation –Alternatively a direct subsidy could also be used to stimulate eco friendly cultivation Study would have been better served with CBA of shaded coffee production vs. other available uses Equitable consolidation may promote the continued use of shaded cultivation due to scale effects Crop rotations, alternative cultivation within the shade range