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- <text id=91TT0719>
- <title>
- Apr. 01, 1991: Good Intentions, Woeful Results
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Apr. 01, 1991 Law And Disorder
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 48
- FOREIGN AID
- Good Intentions, Woeful Results
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>How an ambitious environmental program ended up damaging the
- tropical rain forests
- </p>
- <p>By Eugene Linden
- </p>
- <p> A new threat to the world's fast-diminishing rain forests
- has united the normally fractious environmental community. The
- organizations arrayed against this peril constitute a Who's Who
- of the environmental movement: the Sierra Club, Friends of the
- Earth, the World Wildlife Fund, the National Wildlife
- Federation and the Natural Resources Defense Council.
- Testifying before Congress, Bruce Rich, chairman of the
- Environmental Defense Fund's International Program, said none
- of these groups were "exaggerating when they say they fear
- that an environmental Frankenstein has been unleashed."
- </p>
- <p> And just what is this monster? Sadly, it is a program
- originally intended to save the world's remaining rain forests.
- The Tropical Forestry Action Plan, or T.F.A.P., was perhaps the
- most ambitious environmental aid program ever conceived.
- Sponsored in 1985 by the World Bank, the U.N. and other groups,
- the initiative was designed to help the world's tropical
- countries come to grips with deforestation. With the help of
- international agencies, each nation would come up with a formal
- proposal for managing and protecting its forests. T.F.A.P.
- would channel $8 billion in aid over the next five years to
- implement those programs.
- </p>
- <p> By now, efforts to slow tropical deforestation should have
- been in effect for years. Instead, sponsors had to convene in
- Geneva last month for what James D. Barnes of Friends of the
- Earth described as a "make or break" meeting to see whether the
- foundering plan could even be saved.
- </p>
- <p> Few would deny the seriousness of the crisis that prompted
- T.F.A.P. Moist tropical forests cover just 6% of the earth's
- terrestrial surface but contain at least 50% of the world's
- variety of insects, plants and animals. Throughout the world
- the forests are chopped to clear land, provide firewood or
- supply the timber market. A report issued in 1990 by the U.N.'s
- Food and Agricultural Organization shows that the rate of
- deforestation in the tropical world has accelerated 80% since
- 1980.
- </p>
- <p> T.F.A.P. was the industrial world's largest collective
- effort to help address the developing world's environmental
- problems. It was launched with assurances that the program
- would not repeat the mistakes of past development efforts,
- which included duplication of effort; rip-offs by contractors,
- consultants and corrupt officials; and a tendency to promote
- the donor's priorities at the expense of the Third World's.
- Unfortunately, the forestry plan ended up repeating many of
- these failings.
- </p>
- <p> From the outset, T.F.A.P. seemed to have more to do with
- expert opinion in industrial-world think tanks than with actual
- situations in tropical nations. Perplexed critics asked why
- India, with few remaining tropical forests, was targeted to
- receive $1.2 billion, while Indonesia and Zaire, with huge
- forests, were to receive $193 million and $34 million apiece.
- </p>
- <p> It turned out that the authors of the original T.F.A.P. had
- chosen spending targets not by the size of their uncut tropical
- forests but by their ability to digest large amounts of money.
- Says Bruce Rich: "It was a plan that was really devised
- according to the needs of the aid agencies rather than the
- needs of the countries."
- </p>
- <p> Embarrassed by such missteps, the sponsoring organizations
- made the first of several attempts to fix T.F.A.P. Be patient,
- they advised waiting aid recipients; the plan was still
- evolving, and its shortcomings would be addressed. Despite
- reservations increasingly being voiced by sponsoring
- organizations, however, the program seemed to take on a life
- of its own.
- </p>
- <p> In country after country, proposed action plans stressed
- such projects as the opening of previously pristine forests for
- exploitation. Noting that Cameroon could become the "most
- important African producer and exporter of forestry-based
- products from the start of the 21st century," T.F.A.P. proposed
- construction of a 370-mile road through virgin rain forest that
- is home to 50,000 Pygmies. Many environmentalists wondered, By
- what logic do building roads into pristine areas and financing
- logging operations help preserve uncut forests?
- </p>
- <p> The logic of self-interest, as it turns out: the sponsors
- of T.F.A.P. created a plan that promised benefits to rich and
- poor nations alike if they adopted programs stressing forestry
- over conservation. By making the forestry department of the
- U.N.'s Rome-based Food and Agriculture Organization principally
- responsible for administering the overall plan, moreover, the
- sponsors made it likely that cutting trees would have high
- priority.
- </p>
- <p> But the organizations also made the mistake of selling the
- program in different ways to the rich nations and the Third
- World. Although touted to environmentalists in the industrial
- nations as a plan to save the forests, T.F.A.P. was sold to the
- Third World as one more source of funding for traditional
- forestry projects. Little wonder that the plans tended to be
- short on ways to slow deforestation. Said a development expert:
- "For officials in the Third World, environmental aid has become
- a new form of cargo cult: Go through the motions of doing these
- assessments, and cargo will come."
- </p>
- <p> The most serious problem, however, is that T.F.A.P. may be
- based on a flawed premise. Thomas Fox of the World Resources
- Institute doubts there is evidence to support the assumption
- that tropical forests can be harvested and managed without
- damaging the ecosystem. So little is known about the intricate
- co-dependencies that tie the myriad species of plants, animals
- and insects of these forests into a working system that some
- biologists wonder whether tropical forestry is sustainable at
- any commercial level.
- </p>
- <p> The plan has been all but disavowed by some of its original
- sponsors. James G. Speth, who as president of the World
- Resources Institute was instrumental in creating T.F.A.P., has
- described the plan as the "biggest disappointment of my six
- years at W.R.I."
- </p>
- <p> FAO director general Edouard Saouma, an autocratic executive
- who likes to run his own show, has fought to keep control.
- Under threat of a funding cutoff from the sponsoring
- organizations, however, the U.N. organization agreed in Geneva
- earlier this month to cede control of the program to an outside
- governing council and to participate in the program's redesign.
- For the moment, these decisions have partially mollified
- critics, who are willing to wait to see whether these actions
- will produce meaningful reform.
- </p>
- <p> So far, T.F.A.P. has not fulfilled the most dire predictions
- of environmentalists, but only because very little of the $8
- billion intended for the Third World has actually been spent.
- Moreover, the plan has not been all bad. It offered a framework
- that brought rich nations together with Third World countries
- to begin dealing with tropical deforestation. "There are
- benefits to having global, one-stop shopping for the basic
- principles of forestry lending," says Barnes of Friends of the
- Earth.
- </p>
- <p> Nor can it be said those criticizing T.F.A.P. are without
- sin. Tropical nations today find themselves besieged by
- international environmental groups, each promoting its own
- approach to conservation and planning. Some African nations are
- dutifully undertaking as many as seven different types of
- assessments, often with little coordination between the
- ministries involved. It was the fear of this type of scattershot
- approach that inspired creation of T.F.A.P. in the first
- place.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps the best thing to come out of the T.F.A.P. disaster
- is that the furor it triggered has forced major international
- organizations to pay attention to the complexities surrounding
- tropical deforestation. The World Bank has been harshly
- criticized for promoting development projects that lead to the
- destruction of tropical forests. But the bank's vast influence
- in poorer nations gives it the potential to be a major force
- in plans to save the forests.
- </p>
- <p> There is little time to spare. An estimated 210 million
- acres (85 million hectares) of tropical forests have been
- burned, cut or flooded in the five years since T.F.A.P. was
- conceived. It is not too late for the world to act to save
- these intricate green engines of life, but efforts to help will
- come to naught if the rich nations do not first absorb the
- failings of the world's most ambitious environmental program
- to date.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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