http://www.everythingbiomass.org/Portals/EB/Biofuels%20and%20Indirect%20Land%20Use%20Change_Debate%20Sept%2009.pdf#page=21&zoom=100">Chart of Price of Soybeans and Rates of Deforestation
deforest-
ation
........ soy
rate
......... beans
sq km/yr .. price29000
...... 6.07
18000
...... 6.04
16000
...... 6.04
25000
...... 6.31
15000
...... 6.30
27500
...... 7.54
18000
...... 7.55
13000
...... 7.67
13950
...... 5.98
13100
...... 5.87
14000
...... 5.71
11000
...... 5.70
21300
...... 5.17
18000
...... 5.00
17400
...... 4.76
17950
...... 4.62
17700
...... 6.73
coefficient of correlation = 0.134428325
The Hypothesis of Indirect Land Use Change posits that when a quantity of corn is bought (to make ethanol) this drives up corn prices. As prices for corn go up this drives up the price of soybeans which causes soy farmers in Brazil to chop down trees in the Amazon (before illegal lumber operators can get to them, that is).
A correlation coefficient of .13 indicates there is no correlation between the price of soybeans and rates of deforestation.
But then, who cares about empirical evidence from the real world?