
Smallholders are not the weak link in forest protection (commentary) – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pixabay)
In many parts of the world where farming meets remaining woodlands, small-scale producers make daily choices that shape whether forests stay intact or disappear. These decisions carry direct consequences for the long-term availability of crops that reach dinner tables everywhere, from cooking oils to packaged goods. People who once worked inside large companies have watched their own assumptions change after spending time with these communities and hearing their reasons for keeping trees standing.
A Career Path That Led to a Different View
One sustainability professional spent years inside a major Indonesian forestry and pulp company before stepping away to focus on smaller operations. That experience included helping shape the High Carbon Stock Approach, a method designed to guide land use in tropical areas without clearing high-value forests. Conversations with local groups gradually replaced earlier assumptions that treated small producers mainly as obstacles to expansion.
The shift came from seeing how these farmers live alongside the land they depend on. Their livelihoods often tie directly to the health of nearby forests, creating a built-in incentive to avoid the kind of clearing that larger operations sometimes pursue. Over more than a decade, this perspective moved from corporate offices to direct work with communities who manage plots near protected areas.
Practical Stakes for Food Production
When small farmers receive support rather than suspicion, the results show up in steadier supplies of key ingredients. Palm oil, for instance, comes from regions where these producers already operate next to standing forests. Treating them as partners instead of risks helps maintain the balance that keeps production sustainable over time.
Without that cooperation, efforts to create deforestation-free supply chains can stall. The people living closest to the trees understand seasonal patterns and soil conditions in ways that distant planners often miss. Their continued presence on the land provides a practical check against the rapid conversion that threatens both biodiversity and future harvests.
One Clear Example from the Field
In Sanggau, West Kalimantan, customary forests sit directly behind smallholder oil palm plots. These areas remain standing because the families who farm nearby see value in preserving them for future generations. The arrangement demonstrates how local knowledge and daily stewardship can coexist with commercial crops without large-scale clearing.
Observers who visit such sites notice that the forests serve multiple roles: they protect water sources for the plantations and provide additional resources the families rely on. This integrated approach reduces pressure on the remaining woodland while supporting consistent output for the broader food system.
Looking Ahead for Consumers and Producers
Global food companies continue to set targets for responsible sourcing. Success depends on recognizing that small farmers already contribute to those goals through their land management practices. Policies that overlook this reality risk repeating past mistakes that pushed communities aside rather than working alongside them.
The outcome affects everyone who buys everyday products. When forest protection efforts include the people who live there, the supply of sustainably grown ingredients becomes more reliable. That connection between local decisions and distant kitchens remains one of the most direct ways to keep both forests and food production viable for the long term.

