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The UK’s part in Global Deforestation

Ending the UK’s involvement in overseas deforestation and habitat loss.

Bird's eye view of luscious rainforest canopy, stopping sharply as the ground becomes barren, smoking and tire-marked to make way for palm oil and rubber plantations.
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Why is it happening and the impact it has

Tropical forests are being cut down to grow crops such as soy, palm oil and cocoa which the UK is a key consumer of. Deforestation of this kind is one of the leading reasons for biodiversity loss and is estimated to account for 10%-15% of global greenhouse gas emissions. It’s also often linked to human rights abuses. 

The Risky Business Reports

The RSPB and WWF-UK jointly produced the Risky Business report (2017) and the updated Riskier Business report (2020) to estimate the size of the UK’s overseas land footprint. The 2020 report found that between 2016 and 2018, an area equivalent to 88% of the total land of the UK was required to sustain our need for just seven commodities: beef and leather, cocoa, palm oil, pulp and paper, rubber, soy and timber.

Read The Reports:

The Risky Business Report

The Riskier Business Report

How government should tackle overseas deforestation

Key actions for the UK Government to take are:

  • Introducing and enforcing ambitious legislation to phase out deforestation, habitat loss and human rights abuses
  • Creating market incentives for good practice
  • Ensuring related policies such as trade and renewable energy incorporate strong environmental and social safeguards
  • Supporting producer countries to protect habitats and implement sustainable ways of farming

See the Riskier Business report for more detail.

Further steps

The UK has taken an important step in the right direction by introducing the Environment Act which includes measures that ban UK businesses from using commodities grown on illegally deforested or illegally occupied land. For it to be a success, these measures need to be implemented in a strong and effective way.

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