Skip to main content

Preserving the world’s rainforests by predicting deforestation

Collaborating for a sustainable future

Over the last decades, more than half of Indonesia’s tropical rainforests have vanished. To halt further deforestation, Deloitte teamed up with the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF-NL) and a consortium of public and private entities. Together we developed an AI-powered online tool that can predict where deforestation will occur. Find out how our specialists are working to make a global impact and preserve tropical rainforests.

How AI helps build a more sustainable future

The decline of Indonesia’s rainforests, is mainly due to palm oil cultivation, gold mining, logging and creation of arable land. To prevent further deforestation, WWF-NL, Deloitte and a consortium of public and private entities have developed a tool that predicts deforestation through automated assessment of spectral satellite imagery and other geospatial data. The first phase of this pilot, part of the WWF-NL Forest Foresight program, ran from 2020 onwards in Kalimantan (part of the island of Borneo).

Because of the vast amounts of data our AI-model needed to process, we migrated the initial prototype to a cloud-native, scalable configuration. This allowed us to cut data processing time from twelve to four hours and significantly speed-up prediction generation for the entire island of Borneo (home to 425,124 square kilometers of rainforest).

Much of the input data consist of pixelated spectral satellite imagery. In order to generate predictions, our AI-algorithm asks a determined set of questions for all the pixels in a landscape. To clarify how the AI performs its task, one of our modelling specialists makes the following comparison: “Pretend you’re in a random spot within the vast Borneo rainforest, and ask yourself the question: how likely will deforestation occur here? You then assess: is deforestation happening close to me? How close by is the nearest town? Would an illegal logger be able to transport the wood over roads or canals? Or easily build a (short) logging road? Can palm oil be processed in a mill nearby?”

The resulting predictions are then visualised in a web app, accessible to local government officials and other partners. In Gabon, where we also ran a pilot program, rangers have actually visited specific sites, confirming that predictions had come true. This allowed them to make targeted interventions on the ground and preserve rainforest that would otherwise have perished.

We are proud to have successfully predicted deforestation in Kalimantan, Malaysia, Gabon, Surinam and Guyana, laying the groundwork for preservation of ancient tropical rain forests, in close collaboration with local governments. Currently, our focus is on harvesting as much feedback as possible, in order to build a better system of prediction, intervention and – ultimately – preservation. A system that is both effective and scalable in the long run.

At Deloitte we are committed to helping our partners shape their business operations in sustainable ways. It’s how we make a global impact on the environment and the future of tropical rainforests. Together with the WWF-NL.

Curious about how we can help make your business more sustainable? Let’s connect for impact.

Specialists who made this possible
 

Mark Boersma
Senior Manager
+31882887596
mboersma@deloitte.nl

Did you find this useful?

Thanks for your feedback

If you would like to help improve Deloitte.com further, please complete a 3-minute survey