Seeking natural capital projects: Forest fires, haze, and early-life exposure in Indonesia

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Natural capital will be depleted rapidly and excessively if the long-term, offsite impacts of depletion are ignored. By examining the case of tropical forest burning, we illustrate such myopia: Pursuit of short-term economic gains results in air pollution that causes long-term, irreversible health impacts. We integrate longitudinal data on prenatal exposure to the 1997 Indonesian forest fires with child nutritional outcomes and find that mean exposure to air pollution during the prenatal stage is associated with a half-SD decrease in height-for-age z score at age 17, which is robust to several statistical checks. Because adult height is associated with income, this implies a loss of 4% of average monthly wages for approximately one million Indonesian workers born during this period. To put these human capital losses in the context of policy making, we conduct social cost–benefit analyses of oil palm plantations under different scenarios for clearing land and controlling fires. We find that clearing for oil palm plantations using mechanical methods generates higher social net benefits compared with clearing using fires. Oil palm producers, however, would be unwilling to bear the higher private costs of mechanical clearing. Therefore, we need more effective fire bans, fire suppression, and moratoriums on oil palm in Indonesia to protect natural and human capital, and increase social welfare. © 2019 National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. View source
Year

2019

Secondary Title

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

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences

Volume

116

Number

12

Pages

5239-5245

DOI

http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1802876116

Language

Keyword(s)

Cost–benefit analysis, Environmental health, Health irreversibility, Oil palm, Sustainable development, palm oil, Arecaceae, Article, controlled study, cost benefit analysis, environmental aspects and related phenomena, environmental protection, forest fire, haze, life event, natural capital, plantation, prenatal exposure, priority journal, social aspect, social welfare, adolescent, agriculture, air pollution, ecosystem, female, forest, human, Indonesia, longitudinal study, male, nutritional status, prenatal care, prevention and control, smoke, statistics and numerical data, wildfire, Conservation of Natural Resources, Forests, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Wildfires

Classification
Form: Journal Article
Geographical Area: Indonesia

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