3.1.7

Sustainable Rainforest Management

Test yourself

Challenges to Sustainable Forest Management

In practice, managing forests sustainably is difficult because of individual people's incentives.

Illustrative background for Tragedy of the CommonsIllustrative background for Tragedy of the Commons ?? "content

Tragedy of the Commons

  • Rainforests, owned by nations with millions of people are an example of the 'tragedy of the commons' problem.
  • The world bears the cost of deforestation and climate change, but an individual person probably makes more money and is better off by continuing to do logging.
Illustrative background for Short-term vs long-termIllustrative background for Short-term vs long-term ?? "content

Short-term vs long-term

  • Although things like eco-tourism may be more profitable in the long-run, it is a new industry in lots of places.
  • Logging and mining are likely to provide higher incomes for people in the short-term.
  • Furthermore, the costs of deforestation and climate change are felt over decades. Someone losing their job or taking a pay cut is felt today.
  • In the short-term, if unemployment rises, governments will lose the next election, so they don't have an incentive to make the change.
Illustrative background for High-income vs low-income nationsIllustrative background for High-income vs low-income nations ?? "content

High-income vs low-income nations

  • Lots of rainforest land is concentrated in low-income nations.
  • These countries can benefit from mining and deforestation today to improve people's quality of life.
  • Low-income nations are in more need of the economic benefits that come from deforestation than high-income nations.
Illustrative background for Solutions don't work?Illustrative background for Solutions don't work? ?? "content

Solutions don't work?

  • Although people can try to offset their carbon, if all the trees in the world were cut down in the next 5 years and people offset their impact by planting new trees, the world would lose millions of mature trees and replace them with millions of saplings. This would not effectively neutralise the impact on the climate.
  • Replanting trees is not guaranteed to have the same impact as not cutting down trees in the first place.

Jump to other topics

1Physical Geography

1.1River Environments

1.2Coastal Environments

1.3Hazardous Environments - Tropical Cyclones

1.4Hazardous Environments - Earthquakes & Volcanoes

2Human Geography

3Global Issues

Unlock your full potential with Seneca Premium

  • Unlimited access to 10,000+ open-ended exam questions

  • Mini-mock exams based on your study history

  • Unlock 800+ premium courses & e-books

Get started with Seneca Premium