Global progress toward sustainable forest management

Sustainable forest management (SFM) is many things to many people – yet a common thread is the production of forest goods and services for the present and future generations. The promise of sustainability is rooted in the two premises; first that ecosystems have the potential to renew themselves and...

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Autores principales: MacDicken, K.G., Sola, P., Hall, J., Sabogal, C., Tadoum, M., Wasseige, C. de
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/94629
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author MacDicken, K.G.
Sola, P.
Hall, J.
Sabogal, C.
Tadoum, M.
Wasseige, C. de
author_browse Hall, J.
MacDicken, K.G.
Sabogal, C.
Sola, P.
Tadoum, M.
Wasseige, C. de
author_facet MacDicken, K.G.
Sola, P.
Hall, J.
Sabogal, C.
Tadoum, M.
Wasseige, C. de
author_sort MacDicken, K.G.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Sustainable forest management (SFM) is many things to many people – yet a common thread is the production of forest goods and services for the present and future generations. The promise of sustainability is rooted in the two premises; first that ecosystems have the potential to renew themselves and second that economic activities and social perceptions or values that define human interaction with the environment are choices that can be modified to ensure the long term productivity and health of the ecosystem. SFM addresses a great challenge in matching the increasing demands of a growing human population while maintaining ecological functions of healthy forest ecosystems. This paper does not seek to define SFM, but rather provides analyses of key indicators for the national-scale enabling environment to gain a global insight into progress in implementing enabling and implementing SFM at the national and operational levels. Analyses of the Global Forest Resources Assessment 2015 (FRA) country report data are used to provide insights into the current state of progress in implementing the enabling conditions for SFM. Over 2.17 billion ha of the world’s forest area are predicted by governments to remain in permanent forest land use, of which some 1.1 billion ha are covered by all of the SFM tools investigated in FRA 2015. At the global scale, SFM-related policies and regulations are reported to be in place on 97% of global forest area. While the number of countries with national forest inventories has increased over that past ten years from 48 to 112, only 37% of forests in low income countries are covered by forest inventories. Forest management planning and monitoring of plans has increased substantially as has forest management certification, which exceeded a total of over 430 million ha in 2014. However, 90% of internationally verified certification is in the boreal and temperate climatic domains – only 6% of permanent forests in the tropical domain have been certified as of 2014. Results show that more work is needed to expand the extent and depth of work on establishing the enabling conditions that support SFM over the long term and suggests where those needs are greatest.
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spelling CGSpace946292025-09-25T13:01:45Z Global progress toward sustainable forest management MacDicken, K.G. Sola, P. Hall, J. Sabogal, C. Tadoum, M. Wasseige, C. de sustainability forest management forestry policies certification Sustainable forest management (SFM) is many things to many people – yet a common thread is the production of forest goods and services for the present and future generations. The promise of sustainability is rooted in the two premises; first that ecosystems have the potential to renew themselves and second that economic activities and social perceptions or values that define human interaction with the environment are choices that can be modified to ensure the long term productivity and health of the ecosystem. SFM addresses a great challenge in matching the increasing demands of a growing human population while maintaining ecological functions of healthy forest ecosystems. This paper does not seek to define SFM, but rather provides analyses of key indicators for the national-scale enabling environment to gain a global insight into progress in implementing enabling and implementing SFM at the national and operational levels. Analyses of the Global Forest Resources Assessment 2015 (FRA) country report data are used to provide insights into the current state of progress in implementing the enabling conditions for SFM. Over 2.17 billion ha of the world’s forest area are predicted by governments to remain in permanent forest land use, of which some 1.1 billion ha are covered by all of the SFM tools investigated in FRA 2015. At the global scale, SFM-related policies and regulations are reported to be in place on 97% of global forest area. While the number of countries with national forest inventories has increased over that past ten years from 48 to 112, only 37% of forests in low income countries are covered by forest inventories. Forest management planning and monitoring of plans has increased substantially as has forest management certification, which exceeded a total of over 430 million ha in 2014. However, 90% of internationally verified certification is in the boreal and temperate climatic domains – only 6% of permanent forests in the tropical domain have been certified as of 2014. Results show that more work is needed to expand the extent and depth of work on establishing the enabling conditions that support SFM over the long term and suggests where those needs are greatest. 2015-09 2018-07-03T11:01:32Z 2018-07-03T11:01:32Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/94629 en Open Access Elsevier MacDicken, K.G., Sola, P., Hall, J., Sabogal, C., Tadoum, M., de Wasseige, C.. 2015. Global progress toward sustainable forest management Forest Ecology and Management, 352 : 47-56. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2015.02.005
spellingShingle sustainability
forest management
forestry policies
certification
MacDicken, K.G.
Sola, P.
Hall, J.
Sabogal, C.
Tadoum, M.
Wasseige, C. de
Global progress toward sustainable forest management
title Global progress toward sustainable forest management
title_full Global progress toward sustainable forest management
title_fullStr Global progress toward sustainable forest management
title_full_unstemmed Global progress toward sustainable forest management
title_short Global progress toward sustainable forest management
title_sort global progress toward sustainable forest management
topic sustainability
forest management
forestry policies
certification
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/94629
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