Transcript
Page 1: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

Sustainable forest management inCentral Africa - past, present, futurePeter Holmgren, Director-General CIFOR

Yaoundé 22 May 2013

Page 2: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

Outline

Conference objectives and opportunitiesSFM in Central AfricaCIFOR and Central Africa 3 issues:

• Where to from here? Putting SFM in context• Taking the Landscape approach• Science and Policy

Page 3: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

Vision

CIFOR vision:Forests (and Landscapes) on the agenda – their values recognized

Decisions that influence forests and people supported by solid

science and principles of good governance

Page 4: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

How it started Founded in 1993 after Earth Summit in

Rio de Janeiro; 2013 is 20th Anniversary

Founding sponsors were Australia,Sweden, Switzerland and the US

Indonesia bid successfully to host CIFORheadquarters in Bogor

Cameroon Regional Office opened in 1995

Page 5: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

Conference objectives

Evaluate the impact of research, laws and policy on SFM Identify knowledge gaps Enhance collaboration among research and policy

institutions Provide a forum for stakeholders and leaders on forest

management and governance Clarify role of Central African forests in handling climate

change Highlight progress over the past 20 years

Page 6: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

Opportunities!

Strengthen the role of forestry in the broaderdevelopment agenda

New partnerships across old boundaries in theLandscape

Stimulate public and private investments

Page 7: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

Progress of SFM in Central Africa

UNCED 1992 – milestone• 3 conventions and forest principles• Focused importance of region

Strengthened institutions• Regionally (CBFP, COMIFAC, CBFF)• and also Nationally

Certification and trade Capacity developmentBut also challenges: Poverty and unrest Low return on investments Infrastructure

Page 8: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

CIFOR and Central AfricaLong and deep engagementCertificationManagement planningNon-Timber Forest ProductsDomestic timber marketsUniversity educationState of Forests of the CongoBasinCOMIFAC collaborationForest ObservatoryRegional and national partnersConferences, networks,dissemination, media training

Page 9: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

Issue#1:

HowcanForestrycontinuetoberelevanttothebiggerpicture?

Page 10: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

What defines our focus and priorities? Post-2015 development agenda

• Sustainable Development Goals• Poverty reduction

Food security aspirations, with increasing focus on• Nutrition and health• Climate-smart agriculture and food systems

Handling climate change mitigation and adaptation• Rural communities and land-based sectors

Maintaining biological diversity Green growth with equity

• Return on investments in a green economy

Page 11: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future
Page 12: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

Forestry and the bigger picture

Politicalrelevance

Positivecontributions

Not onlyproblems

Poverty

Foodsecurity

Climatechange

Biodiversity

Greeneconomy

MDG

WFS

UNFCCC

CBD

Rio+20

SustainableDevelopment“Big5”

Forestry

Page 13: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

Issue#2:

WeneedtheLandscapeapproachtofindcombinedsolutions

Page 14: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

Silos and fragmentation

Agriculture

Forestry

Fisheries

Citie

s

Poverty

Biodiversity

Foodsecurity

Climatechange

Greeneconomy

MDG

WFS

UNFCCC

CBD

Rio+20

MDG1c MDG7a MDG7a MDG7dZerohunge

rnil CCRF FCIT

notyet REDD ? indirect

AWP FWP

tbd tbd tbd tbd

MWP ?

An approximate mapping ofmajor intergovernmental actionsand the land-based sectors Land‐

basedSectors

The“Big5”

Page 15: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

Sustainable Landscape framework (proposed)- objectives and performance measures

• Landscapes are a large part ofsustainable development

• Combined solutions needed• Strengthens role of sectors• Local stakeholders in chargeFramework needs to be:• Easy to understand• Applicable everywhere• Applicable on any scale

Allmeasuresstableorimproving=SustainableLandscape

Page 16: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

Global Landscape Forum

Warsaw 16-17 November 2013, at UNFCCC COP-19 Joins Forest and Agriculture Day Wide support from all key partners

Page 17: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

Issue#3:

WeneedtostrengthentheScience‐Policylink.

WeneedEvidence‐basedForestry.

Page 18: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

It is increasingly difficultto know what we know

Page 19: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

Science does not provide the solutions

…but without science, good solutions will not be found…

Bestscience

Society’sneeds&

preferences

Expertopinion

EBF

Bewareofexperts’bias!

Page 20: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

Evidence-based Forestry initiative

Page 21: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

First tranche of key policy questions

• Impactsofbiofuelcropsonbiodiversity

• Gender,forests&foodsecurity

• Conceptsofsciencequality&researchevaluation

• Biodiversitybenefitsof“alternativelivelihood”projects

• Propertyrightsandtheenvironment

Page 22: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

Nomoreissues.

Page 23: Sustainable forest management in Central Africa – past, present, future

Take home messages

Forestry contributes to broader developmentgoals – but this is often not well explained

Sustainable Landscapes can be part of a newdevelopment narrative

Our plans for the future must be evidence-based

Thank you for your attention!


Recommended