forestry and sustainable development
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FORESTRY AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT. By ISMAIL HARUN & ABDUL LATIF MOHMOD Forest Research Institute Malaysia (FRIM) Kepong, 52109 Selangor, Malaysia. Dialoque on Forestry in the Context of Eco-Civilization Guiyang, China 19 July 2013. Content. Introduction - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
INSTITUT PENYELIDIKAN PERHUTANAN MALAYSIAF o r e s t R e s e a r c h I n s t i t u t e M a l a y s i a
www.frim.gov.myISO 9001 : 2008
FORESTRY AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
By
ISMAIL HARUN & ABDUL LATIF MOHMODForest Research Institute Malaysia (FRIM)
Kepong, 52109 Selangor, Malaysia
Dialoque on Forestry in the Context of Eco-CivilizationGuiyang, China
19 July 2013
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ContentIntroduction
Definition of Sustainable DevelopmentStatus of forest resources
What happened at Rio+20Issues on forestryWay forwardConclusion
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"Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.“ ………the World Commission on Environment and Development’s (the Brundtland Commission) report “Our Common Future” (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987).
What is Sustainable Development?
Introduction
Forestry is “the science and practice of caring the forest”…. Miriam-Webber Dictionary
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Relation between Forestryand Sustainable DevelopmentMillennium Declaration (2000, 189 nations made a promise to free people from extreme poverty and multiple deprivations. Millennium Development Goals:
1 Eradicate extreme poverty & hunger2 Achieve universal primary education 3 Promote gender equality and empower women 4 Reduce child mortality 5 Improve maternal health 6 Combat HIV / AIDS, malaria and other diseases 7 Ensure environmental sustainability8 Develop a global partnership for development
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MDG 1 Eradicate extreme poverty & hunger
• Poverty rates have been halved between 1990 and 2010, but 1.2 billion people still live in extreme poverty
• About 700 million fewer people lived in conditions of extreme poverty in 2010 than in 1990.
• The economic and financial crisis has widened the global jobs gap by 67 million people.
• One in eight people still go to bed hungry, despite major progress.
• Globally, nearly one in six children under age five are underweight; one in four are stunted.
• An estimated 7% of children under age of five worldwide are now overweight, another aspect of malnutrition; one quarter of these children live in sub-Saharan Africa.
Where do we stand?
Source: UNDP MDG Report 2013
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MDG 7-Ensure environmental sustainability
• Global emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) have increased by more than 46% since 1990
• Nearly one third of marine fish stocks have been overexploited.
• Many species are at risk of extinction, despite an increase in protected areas.
• More than 2.1 billion people and almost 1.9 billon people, respectively, have gained access to improved water sources and sanitation facilities since 1990
• An estimated 863 million people reside in slums in the developing world.
Where do we stand?
Source: UNDP MDG Report 2013
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What do we have?
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Highlights of FRA 2010• The world's total forest area 4 billion ha, or 31% of
the total land area
• The net loss of forests - 5.2 million ha/year (area about the size of Costa Rica).
• Around 13 million ha of forests were converted to other uses or lost through natural causes (2000-2010), compared to 16 million ha/year in 1990s.
• 12% (more than 460 million ha) designated primarily to conserve biological diversity.
• 1% reported to be significantly affected each year by forest fires.
• Outbreaks of insect pests damage nearly 35 million ha of forest annually (temperate & boreal).
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Rio+20
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Forest at Rio+20Recommendations :
• Restore 150 million hectares of deforested and degraded lands by 2020.
• Promote science, technology, innovation and traditional knowledge in order to face forests main challenge: how to turn them productive without destroying them.
• Zero Net Deforestation by 2020, respecting the rights and knowledge of peoples living in and from the forests and responding to their sustainable development needs.
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193. We highlight the social, economic and environmental benefits of forests to people and the contributions of sustainable forest management to the themes and objectives of the Conference. We support cross-sectoral and cross-institutional policies promoting sustainable forest management. We reaffirm that the wide range of products and services that forests provide creates opportunities to address many of the most pressing sustainable development challenges. We call for enhanced efforts to achieve the sustainable management of forests, reforestation, restoration and afforestation, and we support all efforts that effectively slow, halt and reverse deforestation and forest degradation including inter alia promoting trade in legally-harvested forest products.
Rio outcome document: Section on Forests
To this end, we commit to improving the livelihoods of people and communities by creating the conditions needed for them to sustainably manage forests including through strengthening cooperation arrangements in the areas of finance, trade, transfer of environmentally sound technologies, capacity-building and governance, as well as by promoting secure land tenure, particularly decision-making and benefit sharing, in accordance with national legislation and priorities.
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194. We call for urgent implementation of the Non-legally Binding Instrument on all Types of Forests and the Ministerial Declaration of the high-level segment of the ninth session of the United Nations Forum on Forests on the occasion of the launch of the International Year of Forests.
195. We recognize that the United Nations Forum on Forests, with its universal membership and comprehensive mandate, plays a vital role in addressing forest-related issues in a holistic and integrated manner, and promoting international policy coordination and cooperation to achieve sustainable forest management. We invite the Collaborative Partnership on Forests to continue its support to the Forum and encourage stakeholders to remain actively engaged in the work of the Forum.
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196. We stress the importance of integrating sustainable forest management objectives and practices into the mainstream of economic policy and decision-making, and to that end we commit to working through the governing bodies of member organizations of the Collaborative Partnership on Forests to integrate, as appropriate, the sustainable management of all types of forests into their strategies and programmes.
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Summary of Rio+20 on Forest(The Future We Want)
• Only 4 out 283 paragraphs• Action on an 20 year old agreement without any goals,
timelines or commitment of resource• Originally the plan at Rio 1992 was to come up with an
international treaty on forests. Never materialized but what did come out of Agenda 21 was the United Nations Forum on Forests (UNFF)
• None of the multilateral environmental agreements have actually delivered—the climate change agreement gets a lot of international attention but there has been no concrete action
• The CPF supports the UNFF, and this statement simply asks for continuation of the status quo, no sense of urgency and the need to do things differently is not communicated.
• Statement on support for SFM is nothing new• Overall, poor fare was given to forest
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Issues on Forestry Population growth – increase demand, social and
poverty
Climate change
Loss of biodiversity
Desertification
Deforestation & forest degradation
Unsustainable management of forest resources
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The most diverse ecosystems on earth with >60% of global biodiversity.
Store 25% of terrestrial Carbon &are a key source of valuable products, including timber & medicines.
Regulate climates and
controls floods & droughts.
Tropical Rainforest?
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“Trade Barriers”
Palm oil free Nutella!
Health concerns Nutella Tax (French)
US Farm Bill 2012
Roundtable on Sustainable Palm
Oil (RSPO)
EU FLEGTEuropean Union Forest
Law Enforcement, Governance and Trade
US Lacey Act
Australia Illegal Timber Ban
Eco Friendly Certification
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• World -1.75 million known species• Biodiversity has declined by more
than a quarter in the last 35 years• The Living Planet Index (LPI), which
tracks nearly 4,000 populations of wildlife, shows an overall fall in population trends of 27% between 1970 and 2005.
Loss of Biodiversity
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Forest Climate Change
Well Managed & Conserved > Store Carbon, Sequester CO2, Protect
BioD, Soil, Water & etc.
Poorly Managed & Conserved > CO2 Emissions, Climate Change
Impacts, Loss in BioD, Water Stress, & etc .
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Forest & Climate Change Forest & climate change is a
contentious issue. (20% emission) View as cost-effective options to
reduce global green house gas emission.
As a party to UNFCCC Malaysia is obligated to provide periodic reports on green house gas inventory, adaptation & mitigation activities
A national accounting procedures developed.
Methodologies to address Reducing Emission from Deforestation & Forest Degradation (REDD) and carbon offset studies are currently being undertaken
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Forest and Climate Change
Recognise the role played by forest in mitigating climate Change Impacts
Promotes good practice in forest management
Support R&D to enhance knowledge and capacity on understanding role and vulnerability of forest to climate change
Support Mechanism such as REDD+ that promote good stewardship of forests to mitigate climate change impacts
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REDD+ REDD+ Mechanism is important to
Malaysia as it support sustainable forest management practices
REDD+ enhances the value of forest by recognising its important role in storing and sequestring carbon
Forestry is an important economic sector in manu countries thus managing forest for continuous supply of wood materials is a priority• REDD+ ensure that forest are protected and managed to enhance its sequestration potential and C storage CDM only provides incentives for new and additional forests
(A&R) REDD + allow developing countries to receive some payments
for the value their existing forests provide
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The Way ForwardSFMInnovative financial mechanism for SFMReduce deforestation rateImprove R&D including social researchIncrease of professionals – creates more green
jobsForestry – Global problems but require local
solutions
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Forest area
Nutrient cycling/soil productivity
Social &culturalheritageWater/marine
ecosystem
Climate:- rainfall &
Carbon cycling
Timber & nontimber
products
Biodiversity (flora & fauna)
Challenges
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Pillars of SFM
ENVIRONMENT
SOCIAL & CULTURAL
ECONOMY
SUSTAINABLE FOREST
MANAGEMENT
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Conclusion“There is sufficiency in the world for man’s need but not for man’s greed”
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Thank you