Search: id:"swepub:oai:research.chalmers.se:29fabc5a-e01c-461f-8318-41a9a8edb3d6" >
Environmental, land...
-
Sparovek, G.Universidade de Sao Paulo (USP),University of Sao Paulo (USP)
(author)
Environmental, land-use and economic implications of Brazilian sugarcane expansion 1996-2006
- Article/chapterEnglish2009
Publisher, publication year, extent ...
-
2008-11-20
-
Springer Science and Business Media LLC,2009
Numbers
-
LIBRIS-ID:oai:research.chalmers.se:29fabc5a-e01c-461f-8318-41a9a8edb3d6
-
https://research.chalmers.se/publication/128096URI
-
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11027-008-9164-3DOI
Supplementary language notes
-
Language:English
-
Summary in:English
Part of subdatabase
Classification
-
Subject category:art swepub-publicationtype
-
Subject category:ref swepub-contenttype
Notes
-
Governments are promoting biofuels and the resulting changes in land use and crop reallocation to biofuels production have raised concerns about impacts on environment and food security. The promotion of biofuels has also been questioned based on suggested marginal contribution to greenhouse gas emissions reduction, partly due to induced land use change causing greenhouse gas emissions. This study reports how the expansion of sugarcane in Brazil during 1996-2006 affected indicators for environment, land use and economy. The results indicate that sugarcane expansion did not in general contribute to direct deforestation in the traditional agricultural region where most of the expansion took place. The amount of forests on farmland in this area is below the minimum stated in law and the situation did not change over the studied period. Sugarcane expansion resulted in a significant reduction of pastures and cattle heads and higher economic growth than in neighboring areas. It could not be established to what extent the discontinuation of cattle production induced expansion of pastures in other areas, possibly leading to indirect deforestation. However, the results indicate that a possible migration of the cattle production reached further than the neighboring of expansion regions. Occurring at much smaller rates, expansion of sugarcane in regions such as the Amazon and the Northeast region was related to direct deforestation and competition with food crops, and appear not to have induced economic growth. These regions are not expected to experience substantial increases of sugarcane in the near future, but mitigating measures are warranted.
Subject headings and genre
Added entries (persons, corporate bodies, meetings, titles ...)
-
Barretto, A.Universidade de Sao Paulo (USP),University of Sao Paulo (USP)
(author)
-
Berndes, Göran,1966Chalmers tekniska högskola,Chalmers University of Technology(Swepub:cth)frtgb
(author)
-
Martins, S.
(author)
-
Maule, R.
(author)
-
Universidade de Sao Paulo (USP)Chalmers tekniska högskola
(creator_code:org_t)
Related titles
-
In:Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change: Springer Science and Business Media LLC14:3, s. 285-2981381-23861573-1596
Internet link
Find in a library
To the university's database