Zero deforestation commitments (ZDCs) are voluntary initiatives where companies or countries pledge to eliminate deforestation from their supply chains. These commitments offer much promise for sustainable commodity production, but are undermined by a lack of transparency about their coverage and impacts. Here, using state-of-the-art supply chain data, we introduce an approach to evaluate the impact of ZDCs, linking traders and international markets to commodity-associated deforestation in the sub-national jurisdictions from which they source. We focus on the Brazilian soy sector, where we find that ZDC coverage is increasing, but under-represents the Cerrado biome where most soy-associated deforestation currently takes place. Though soy-associated deforestation declined in the Amazon after the introduction of the Soy Moratorium, we observe no change in the exposure of companies or countries adopting ZDCs to soy-associated deforestation in the Cerrado. We further assess the formulation and implementation of these ZDCs and identify several systematic weaknesses that must be addressed to increase the likelihood that they achieve meaningful reductions in deforestation in future. As the 2020 deadline for several of these commitments approaches, our approach can provide independent monitoring of progress toward the goal of ending commodityassociated deforestation.
Zero deforestation commitments (ZDCs) are voluntary initiatives where companies or countries pledge to eliminate deforestation from their supply chains. These commitments offer much promise for sustainable commodity production, but are undermined by a lack of transparency about their coverage and impacts. Here, using state-of-the-art supply chain data, we introduce an approach to evaluate the impact of ZDCs, linking traders and international markets to commodity-associated deforestation in the sub-national jurisdictions from which they source. We focus on the Brazilian soy sector, where we find that ZDC coverage is increasing, but under-represents the Cerrado biome where most soy-associated deforestation currently takes place. Though soy-associated deforestation declined in the Amazon after the introduction of the Soy Moratorium, we observe no change in the exposure of companies or countries adopting ZDCs to soy-associated deforestation in the Cerrado. We further assess the formulation and implementation of these ZDCs and identify several systematic weaknesses which must be addressed to increase the likelihood that they achieve meaningful reductions in deforestation in future. As the 2020 deadline for several of these commitments approaches, our approach can provide independent monitoring of progress toward the goal of ending commodity-associated deforestation.
Supply chain information
is invaluable to further regionalize product
life cycle assessments (LCAs), but detailed information linking production
and consumption centers is not always available. We introduce the
commodity supply mix (CSM) defined as the trade-volume-weighted average
representing the combined geographic areas for the production of a
commodity exported to a given market with the goal of (1) enhancing
the relevance of inventory and impact regionalization and (2) allocating
these impacts to specific markets. We apply the CSM to the Brazilian
soybean supply chain mapped by Trase to obtain the mix of ecoregions
and river basins linked to domestic consumption and exports to China,
EU, France, and the rest of the world, before quantifying damage to
biodiversity, and water scarcity footprints. The EU had the lowest
potential biodiversity damage but the largest water scarcity footprint
following respective sourcing patterns in 12 ecoregions and 18 river
basins. These results differed from the average impact scores obtained
from Brazilian soybean production information alone. The CSM can be
derived at different scales (subnationally, internationally) using
existing supply chain information and constitutes an additional step
toward greater regionalization in LCAs, particularly for impacts with
greater spatial variability such as biodiversity and water scarcity.
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