Protecting forests


  • Conserving forests

Context

Deforestation and species loss are problems that have plagued modernization the world over. The worldwide estimate of the deforestation rate which was calculated by the FAO in 1980 was a loss of some 11.3 million hectares annually. With the loss of these forests, animals species biodiversity is greatly threatened. Population pressure and bad governmental policies has led to much deforestation. Global implications are that the world's food supply at risk, as well as, the international commerce based on the trade of agricultural commodities. It is necessary to reform government policies regarding land use to help manage the problem.

Initiatives to promote forest protection include; initiatives to protect forests against atmospheric pollution and fire; afforestation; the improvement of woodlands; the protection of forests; the development of forest infrastructure; the development of appropriate forests products; the conservation of genetic resources of forests collection; and, the compilation of forestry information from different countries in support of forestry related research programmes addressing agriculture, environment, biotechnology and energy.

This strategy features in the framework of Agenda 21 as formulated at UNCED (Rio de Janeiro, 1992), now coordinated by the United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development and implemented through national and local authorities.

Agenda 21 recommends:

(a) increasing the protection of forests from pollutants, fire, pests and diseases and other human-made interferences such as forest poaching, mining and unmitigated shifting cultivation, the uncontrolled introduction of exotic plant and animal species;

(b) developing and accelerating research for a better understanding of problems relating to the management and regeneration of all types of forest;

(c) strengthening and/or establishing appropriate measures to assess and/or check inter-border movement of plants and related materials;

(d) enhancing the protection, sustainable management and conservation of all forests, and the greening of degraded areas, through forest rehabilitation, afforestation, reforestation and other rehabilitative means.

Implementation

The Third Ministerial Conference Environment for Europe (Sofia, October 1995) endorsed the Pan-European Biological and Landscape Diversity Strategy and supported the creation of a Common Work-Programme on the Conservation and Enhancement of Biological and Landscape Diversity in Forest Ecosystems in Europe for the period from 1997 to 2000. The European Union Forestry Strategy called for by the European Parliament in its Resolution of 30 January 1997 includes actions to promote the conservation and enhancement of biodiversity in forests.

Facilitated by

  1. Supporting use of environmentally sound technology
  2. Studying conservation of forest ecosystems
  3. Strengthening national plans for improving planted forests
  4. Stabilizing shifting agriculture
  5. Researching forests
  6. Rehabilitating degraded forested areas
  7. Reforesting
  8. Providing specialized training in forest planning
  9. Providing information about forest resources
  10. Planting forests for carbon sequestration
  11. Managing tropical forest areas
  12. Limiting forest resources
  13. Increasing forest productivity
  14. Improving intermediate yields on investments in planted forests
  15. Expanding urban forestry programmes
  16. Expanding public participation in formulating forest programmes
  17. Establishing ecological buffer zones
  18. Developing policy for conservation of forests
  19. Developing new social institutions
  20. Coordinating research on carbon sequestration
  21. Conserving global biodiversity
  22. Assessing local knowledge of forests
  23. Assessing interaction of forests and climate change


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