Pressure over Stock: Explaining REDD+ Siting and Management in Brazil
Thiago Gil and
Wesley Mendes da Silva
Environmental Management and Sustainable Development, 2025, vol. 14, issue 2, 108-142
Abstract:
The Amazon remains a climate cornerstone, yet deforestation pressures persist and the role of carbon projects in mitigating those pressures is contested. We assemble a municipality-level panel for the Brazilian Amazon by harmonizing land-cover classifications, deforestation indicators, municipal geometries, and the Verified Carbon Standard (VCS) registry of REDD+ projects. Spatial structure is characterized with Moran’s I and Local Indicators of Spatial Association (LISA); environmental profiles are synthesized via PCA-assisted hierarchical clustering. To explain where projects occur, we estimate standard and Firth bias-reduced logistic regressions with standardized predictors reflecting pressure (recent deforestation) and stock (remaining forest cover). Projects concentrate both in well-preserved forest clusters and along livestock/agriculture conversion frontiers, indicating a bimodal geography consistent with preventive and reactive logics. Across specifications, recent deforestation share is the only consistent, statistically significant predictor of siting; a one-standard-deviation increase raises the odds of REDD+ presence by about 50% (OR ≈ 1.5) in the Firth model, while simple“more forest, more projects†patterns weaken once recent clearing is controlled for. We discuss implications for interpreting siting through a transparent pressure-stock lens (as an interpretive, not prescriptive, tool), and we note limitations alongside extensions using spatial logit/probit, improved entity resolution, and quasi-experimental checks for impacts.
Date: 2025
References: Add references at CitEc
Citations:
Downloads: (external link)
https://www.macrothink.org/journal/index.php/emsd/article/download/23115/17817 (application/pdf)
https://www.macrothink.org/journal/index.php/emsd/article/view/23115 (text/html)
Related works:
This item may be available elsewhere in EconPapers: Search for items with the same title.
Export reference: BibTeX
RIS (EndNote, ProCite, RefMan)
HTML/Text
Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:mth:emsd88:v:14:y:2025:i:2:p:108-142
Access Statistics for this article
Environmental Management and Sustainable Development is currently edited by Jenny Young
More articles in Environmental Management and Sustainable Development from Macrothink Institute
Bibliographic data for series maintained by Technical Support Office ().