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Featured researches published by Javier Godar.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Actor-specific contributions to the deforestation slowdown in the Brazilian Amazon.

Javier Godar; Toby A. Gardner; E. Jorge Tizado; Pablo Pacheco

Significance The Brazilian Amazon is at a critical juncture after the recent stabilization of deforestation rates. Identifying opportunities for continued deforestation reductions requires an understanding of the contribution of different actors to overall deforestation. We provide the first such assessment, to our knowledge, that reports on two headline findings. First, between 2004 and 2011, areas dominated by properties larger than 500 ha accounted for 48% of the deforestation compared with only 12% for smallholders (<100 ha). Second, the deforestation share attributed to the largest properties (≥2,500 ha) declined by 63% from a peak in 2005, whereas that of smallholders increased by 69%. Further reductions in deforestation are likely to require a shift toward more incentive-based policies that are tailored toward different actors. Annual deforestation rates in the Brazilian Amazon fell by 77% between 2004 and 2011, yet have stabilized since 2009 at 5,000–7,000 km2. We provide the first submunicipality assessment, to our knowledge, of actor-specific contributions to the deforestation slowdown by linking agricultural census and remote-sensing data on deforestation and forest degradation. Almost half (36,158 km2) of the deforestation between 2004 and 2011 occurred in areas dominated by larger properties (>500 ha), whereas only 12% (9,720 km2) occurred in areas dominated by smallholder properties (<100 ha). In addition, forests in areas dominated by smallholders tend to be less fragmented and less degraded. However, although annual deforestation rates fell during this period by 68–85% for all actors, the contribution of the largest landholders (>2,500 ha) to annual deforestation decreased over time (63% decrease between 2005 and 2011), whereas that of smallholders went up by a similar amount (69%) during the same period. In addition, the deforestation share attributable to remote areas increased by 88% between 2009 and 2011. These observations are consistent across the Brazilian Amazon, regardless of geographical differences in actor dominance or socioenvironmental context. Our findings suggest that deforestation policies to date, which have been particularly focused on command and control measures on larger properties in deforestation hotspots, may be increasingly limited in their effectiveness and fail to address all actors equally. Further reductions in deforestation are likely to be increasingly costly and require actor-tailored approaches, including better monitoring to detect small-scale deforestation and a shift toward more incentive-based conservation policies.


Environmental Research Letters | 2016

Balancing detail and scale in assessing transparency to improve the governance of agricultural commodity supply chains

Javier Godar; Clément Suavet; Toby A. Gardner; Elena Dawkins; Patrick Meyfroidt

To date, assessments of the sustainability of agricultural commodity supply chains have largely relied on some combination of macro-scale footprint accounts, detailed life-cycle analyses and fine-scale traceability systems. Yet these approaches are limited in their ability to support the sustainability governance of agricultural supply chains, whether because they are intended for coarser-grained analyses, do not identify individual actors, or are too costly to be implemented in a consistent manner for an entire region of production. Here we illustrate some of the advantages of a complementary middle-ground approach that balances detail and scale of supply chain transparency information by combining consistent country-wide data on commodity production at the sub-national (e.g. municipal) level with per shipment customs data to describe trade flows of a given commodity covering all companies and production regions within that country. This approach can support supply chain governance in two key ways. First, enhanced spatial resolution of the production regions that connect to individual supply chains allows for a more accurate consideration of geographic variability in measures of risk and performance that are associated with different production practices. Second, identification of key actors that operate within a specific supply chain, including producers, traders, shippers and consumers can help discriminate coalitions of actors that have shared stake in a particular region, and that together are capable of delivering more cost-effective and coordinated interventions. We illustrate the potential of this approach with examples from Brazil, Indonesia and Colombia. We discuss how transparency information can deepen understanding of the environmental and social impacts of commodity production systems, how benefits are distributed among actors, and some of the trade-offs involved in efforts to improve supply chain sustainability. We then discuss the challenges and opportunities of our approach to strengthen supply chain governance and leverage more effective and fair accountability systems.


Environmental Research Letters | 2016

Towards more spatially explicit assessments of virtual water flows: Linking local water use and scarcity to global demand of Brazilian farming commodities

Rafaela Flach; Ylva Ran; Javier Godar; Louise Karlberg; Clément Suavet

Global consumption of farming commodities is an important driver of water demand in regions of production. This is the case in Brazil, which has emerged as one of the main producers of globally traded farming commodities. Traditional methods to assess environmental implications of this demand rely on international trade material flows at country resolution; we argue for the need of finer scales that capture spatial heterogeneity in environmental variables in the regions of production, and that account for differential sourcing within the borders of a country of production. To illustrate this, we obtain virtual water flows from Brazilian municipalities to countries of consumption, by allocating high-resolution water footprints of sugarcane and soy production to spatially-explicit material trade flows. We found that this approach results in differences of virtual water use estimations of over 20% when compared to approaches that disregard spatial heterogeneity in sourcing patterns, for three of the main consumers of the analysed crops. This discrepancy against methods using national resolution in trade flows is determined by national heterogeneity in water resources, and differential sourcing. To illustrate the practical implications of this approach, we relate virtual water flows to water stress, identifying where global demand for water coincides with high levels of water stress. For instance, the virtual water flows for Brazilian sugarcane sourced by China were disproportionally less associated to areas with higher water stress when compared to those of the EU, due to EUs much higher reliance on sugarcane from water scarce areas in Northeast Brazil. Our findings indicate that the policy relevance of current assessments of virtual water flows that rely on trade data aggregated at the national level may be hampered, as they do not capture the spatial heterogeneity in water resources, water use and water management options.


Forest Ecology and Management | 2012

Who is responsible for deforestation in the Amazon? A spatially explicit analysis along the Transamazon Highway in Brazil

Javier Godar; Emilio Jorge Tizado; Benno Pokorny


Ecological Economics | 2015

Towards more accurate and policy relevant footprint analyses: Tracing fine-scale socio-environmental impacts of production to consumption

Javier Godar; U. Martin Persson; E. Jorge Tizado; Patrick Meyfroidt


Forest Policy and Economics | 2013

From large to small: Reorienting rural development policies in response to climate change, food security and poverty

Benno Pokorny; Wil de Jong; Javier Godar; Pablo Pacheco; James Johnson


World Development | 2015

Development Conditions for Family Farming: Lessons From Brazil

Gabriel Medina; Camila Almeida; Evandro Novaes; Javier Godar; Benno Pokorny


Human Ecology | 2012

Typology and Characterization of Amazon Colonists: A Case Study Along the Transamazon Highway

Javier Godar; Emilio Jorge Tizado; Benno Pokorny; James Johnson


Annals of the American Association of Geographers | 2018

Rents, Actors, and the Expansion of Commodity Frontiers in the Gran Chaco

Yann le Polain de Waroux; Matthias Baumann; Nestor Ignacio Gasparri; Gregorio I. Gavier-Pizarro; Javier Godar; Tobias Kuemmerle; Robert Müller; Fabricio Vázquez; José N. Volante; Patrick Meyfroidt


Archive | 2010

La producción familiar como alternativa de un desarrollo sostenible para la Amazonía: lecciones aprendidas de iniciativas de uso forestal por productores familiares en la Amazonía boliviana, brasilera, ecuatoriana y peruana

Benno Pokorny; Javier Godar; L. Hoch; James Johnson; J. de Koning; Gabriel Medina; R. Steinbrenner; V. Vos; Jes Weigelt

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Toby A. Gardner

Stockholm Environment Institute

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Elena Dawkins

Stockholm Environment Institute

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Patrick Meyfroidt

Université catholique de Louvain

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Clément Suavet

Stockholm Environment Institute

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Gabriel Medina

Universidade Federal de Goiás

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Pablo Pacheco

Center for International Forestry Research

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