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As COVID-19 spreads, commodity markets rumble

Oil palm fruit in Indonesia, the world's top palm oil producer. The commodity is used in everything from detergents and cosmetics to breakfast cereals and ice cream. Photo by Rhett A. Butler

  • Projections of a construction slowdown caused the price of lumber to plummet on global markets.
  • While palm oil prices have dropped by 15 percent on lower demand for biofuels, most agricultural commodity prices have remained relatively stable so far.
  • Economists say the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on the environment is hard to forecast, but warn that the global economy could be on the brink of collapse.

The images are stark. Smogless skies over Los Angeles. A drop in air pollution over northern Italy that’s so sharp it can be seen from space. Emissions from vehicles in New York City are down nearly 50%. For a battered planet, the international coronavirus pandemic has so far been — at least temporarily — an eerie reprieve.

Across the world, countries are virtually shutting down in hopes that severe restrictions on movement and commercial activity inside their borders will slow the spread of the disease. The economic impact of these measures has already led some economists to predict a crisis to follow that could rival the 2008 recession — or worse.

Commodity markets are already starting to feel the squeeze, as producers anticipate an economic downturn that could last for months or longer. And economists say it may only be the beginning.

“It is obviously a little early to tell,” Sven Wunder, principal scientist at the European Forest Institute, said in an email to Mongabay. “Just one month ago, we were still at all-time US stock markets highs. But we could well see a game-changing 1929 type of watershed moment for the world economy.”

Deforestation in Kapuas Hulu, Indonesian Borneo. Photo by Rhett A. Butler.
Deforestation in Indonesian Borneo. Palm oil production is one of the biggest drivers of deforestation in Indonesia. Photo by Rhett A. Butler.

Economic crises have historically had a major impact on the environment. Reduced demand for commodities like timber, vegetable oil, and beef can alleviate pressure on forests, and extractive industries are less likely to invest in exploration or new projects during a recession. The precipitous decline in oil prices this year, for example, has already cut exploration budgets in Brazil by 20%.

So far, the effects of the coronavirus pandemic on commodity markets have been mixed. The price of timber dropped by nearly half in March on expectations of a slowdown in construction, and palm oil is down by nearly 15% since the beginning of 2020, partly due to a dramatic decline in oil prices that has reduced demand for biofuels. On April 2, the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization said that food prices have dropped overall, including a 12% decline in the vegetable oil price index.

“Eventually, [there will be] less commodity-led agricultural deforestation and timber-led forest degradation, as aggregate demand in export markets is reduced,” Wunder said.

But the price of beef, another key driver of deforestation, has increased slightly since the start of the year, and so far agricultural commodities have only seen slight declines.

Amazon rainforest and cattle pasture. Deforestation and land use change extending south from the Amazon’s southern limits influences local and distant climate, a recent study shows. Photo by Rhett A. Butler / Mongabay

“We still aren’t seeing changes in agricultural commodity prices significant enough to affect global deforestation,” said David Kaimowitz, senior adviser at the Climate and Land Use Alliance.

The price of gold rebounded after a sharp drop midway through March, and is up slightly since the start of the year. High gold prices can increase incentives for destructive mining in the Amazon and other fragile ecosystems, but Wunder says if the economic crisis deepens he expects them to fall.

“In the 2008 crisis, gold initially went high, then it went down quite strongly because people were looking for liquidity,” he said.

The impact of an economic downturn on forests could also be determined by what happens in currency exchange markets. If tropical countries see their national currencies crater relative to the dollar, commodity prices listed in those currencies could rise, creating incentives for increased production.

What happens to the environment in the wake of the pandemic will largely depend on the scale of the economic damage it causes. So far, food production has largely been uninterrupted, but if supply chains are disrupted by outbreaks in countries like China, there could be knock-on effects in export markets for beef and other products.

Gold mining in Borneo. Photo by Rhett A. Butler
Gold mining in Borneo. Photo by Rhett A. Butler

World leaders say they hope that stimulus packages will be able to stave off the worst effects of the crisis, but Wunder says they should brace for a potentially devastating period that could fundamentally reorder the global economy.

“This economic fallout may become much more dramatic than the 2008 financial crisis, and the return to any kind of normality much more distant than we as environmentalists and responsible natural resource managers would bargain for,” he wrote in a blog post on March 25.

Such a collapse would be wreak havoc on societies across the world, with millions likely to slip into poverty. But it would also reduce pressure on forests as timber harvesting and other extractive activities slow down.

Wunder says that could be an opportunity for the world to re-evaluate the scale of destruction that those activities have caused in recent decades.

“I think that a crisis is always a chance for structural change,” he said.

Banner image: Oil palm fruit in Indonesia, the world’s top palm oil producer. The commodity is used in everything from detergents and cosmetics to breakfast cereals and ice cream. Photo by Rhett A. Butler

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