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Economic crisis hurts forestry sector, sustainability initiatives



The global economic crisis has slowed demand for timber products and may undermine efforts to improve the environmental performance of forestry, reports the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in its biannual “State of the World’s Forests 2009”, released today.



“Wood demand is unlikely to reach the peak of 2005-2006 again in the foreseeable future,” the report said. “Scaling down of production is widespread in almost all countries and all forest industries, from logging to sawmilling to production of wood panels, pulp, paper and furniture.”



FAO said that falling demand for commodities would reduce pressure to convert forests for croplands as well as delay the development of next-generation biofuel feedstocks derived from fiber. Lower prices for timber and agricultural products, coupled with a difficult financing environment, will sap the viability of once-profitable operations.






Bad economic not necessarily a boon for the environment



Still the news is not all positive for the world’s remaining forests.



FAO said that green initiatives — including sustainable forest management, timber certification, and payments for carbon sequestration in forests — would likely suffer as well.



“The economic crisis could also reduce investment in sustainable forest management and favor illegal logging,” it said. “Contraction of formal economic sectors often opens opportunities for expansion of the informal sector, including illegal logging. For example, a number of countries in Southeast Asia witnessed an increase in illegal logging following the 1997/98 economic crisis.”



“Declining demand for high-priced wood from legal operations, reduced institutional capacity to protect forests as a result of lower budgets and increasing unemployment in the formal sector could increase illegal logging.”




Oil palm plantations and forest in Costa Rica 2009

The report noted that declining affluence could push recent urban migrants back to the countryside and drive expansion of subsistence cultivation. Reduced remittances from abroad could further increase the need to clear forests.



“A more general concern is that some governments may dilute previously ambitious green goals or defer key policy decisions related to future climate change mitigation,” the report said. “Commitment to European legislation on climate change, especially on auctioning emission allowances, is meeting obstacles.”



“Initiatives such as those for reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD) that are dependent on international financial transfers could face similar problems.”



The report noted that a decline in travel may hurt wildlife tourism, an important source of income in some biodiversity-rich rural areas.



The report includes with a wealth of forestry data, most of which was part of prior editions of the “State of the World’s Forests”. The next major update ̵ which is expected to include more accurate forest data — will be in 2010.



State of the World’s Forests 2009









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