CRITERIA AND INDICATORS FOR SUSTANINABLE FOREST MANAGEMENT IN PAKISTAN' - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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CRITERIA AND INDICATORS FOR SUSTANINABLE FOREST MANAGEMENT IN PAKISTAN'

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Title: CRITERIA AND INDICATORS FOR SUSTANINABLE FOREST MANAGEMENT IN PAKISTAN'


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QUOTE
  • The Masters of Forests ... shall survey and
    visit all forests and all woods which they
    include, and they shall effect the sales as
    needed, with a view to continuously maintaining
    the said forests and woods in good condition."
  •  Royal Ordinance on Forests, enacted in Brunoy
    more than 650 years ago, on 29th May 1346, by
    Philippe of Valois.

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CRITERIA AND INDICATORS FOR SUSTANINABLE FOREST
MANAGEMENT IN PAKISTAN
  • Pakistan Forest Institute Peshawar

4
National Level Criteria and Indicators
  • National level criteria and indicators help
    decision makers, including planners and policy
    makers, to define what makes up SFM, and to
    establish guidelines and monitor trends in the
    sustainability of the goods and services being
    provided by a nation's forests.

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Major Criteria and Indicator Processes and
Initiatives
  • International Tropical Timber Organization
    (ITTO).
  • Pan-European.
  • Montreal.
  • Tarapoto.
  • Dry Zone Africa.
  • Near East.

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SUSTAINABLE FOREST MANAGEMENT
  • Sustainable Forest Management is the way of
    management in which growth exceeds timber
    harvest, now also encompasses economics,
    environmental and social qualities that
    contribute to the sustainability of forest
    dependent communities and ecosystems as well as
    the forest itself.
  • Central American and African Timber Organization
    (ATO).

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SFM
  • .This is a complex concept of sustainable
    forest management and requires input from a wide
    range of stakeholders to identify criteria for
    assessing sustainability and methods for
    achieving it.

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CRITERIA
  • A category of conditions or processes by which
    sustainable forest management may be assessed. A
    criterion is characterized by a set of related
    indicators, which are monitored periodically to
    assess change.

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INDICATORS
  • A measure of an aspect of the criterion. It may
    be quantitative or qualitative variable which
    can be measured and when observed periodically
    demonstrates trends.

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Why We Need Criteria and Indicators?
  • To address the difficulty of Sustainable Forest
    Management into an operational tool that could be
    applied in forest management.
  • Policy and decision making can be rationalised
    and improved.
  • To promote improved forest management practices
    over time.
  • To develop a healthier and more productive
    forest estate, which can meet the social,
    economic, environmental and political needs of
    country now and in the future.
  • To enhance an awareness, knowledge and
    appreciation for the measurement of progress on
    Sustainable Forest Management.
  • Foster the political support necessary to achieve
    Sustainable Forest Management and to develop the
    social capital.

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Criterion 1 Extent of Forest and Tree Cover
  • For sustainable management of forest resources
    , information about the extent of forest area and
    growing stock is imperative. It is therefore
    important to ensure that these resources are at
    least maintained at the existing level.

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1INDICATORS
  • Forest area of natural ( by types) and man-made
    forests
  • Extent of forest area under fragile ecosystems
  • Level of dense and degraded forest
  • Forest on other wooded lands
  • Ratio of forest area rich in producing NWFP/
    Total forest area
  • Forest area diverted for non-forestry uses
  • Community managed forest areas
  • Ratio of forest Area/ Other Land

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Criterion 2 Maintenance of Forest Ecosystem
Health and Vitality
  • Ensures that forests do not lose their ability
    to provide goods and services as a consequence of
    being exposed to processes (e.g., fire, wind
    storms, floods) or agents (e.g., insects,
    diseases) outside the range of historical
    variation. In addition, ensures that basic
    ecosystem processes such as nutrient cycling or
    seed dispersal are operating within the range of
    historical variation.

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2A .INDICATORS
  • Status of natural regeneration
  • Status of natural succession
  • Status of secondary forests
  • Weed, pest, disease, grazing, fire, etc.
  • Maintenance of food chain
  • Area and percent of regional deforestation.

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2B .INDICATORS
  • Regional degradation rates.
  • Values of biomass flux over the past 20 years.
  • Ratio of protection area/production areas.
  • Ratio of forest area affected by human
    activities/ total forest area.

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Criterion 3 Conservation of Biological
Diversity
  • Conservation of biological diversity demands the
    maintenance of ecosystem, species, and genetic
    diversity. Conserving biodiversity through forest
    management has at least three different
    components Maintaining sufficient amounts of all
    native habitats across the landscape so that no
    species becomes endangered, addressing specific
    habitat and other needs of already endangered
    species and providing some form of reserve areas
    (e.g., National Parks, Wilderness Areas) for each
    forest type.

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3A. INDICATORS
  • Area of protected and fragmented ecosystems
  • Number of rare, endangered, threatened and
    endemic species.
  • Level of species richness and diversity
  • Change in the Canopy cover
  • Trend of production of medicinal and aromatic
    plants and other NWFPs
  • Level of non-destructive harvest.
  • Change in areas by forest types relative to total
    forest area.

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3B. INDICATORS
  • Change in growing stock and harvesting rates in
    natural forests.
  • Change in areas by classification system of trees
    outside forests.
  • Change in forest areas adjacent to urban land as
    a result of human activities.
  • Number of forest dependent species.

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Criterion 4Conservation and Maintenance of Soil
and Water Resources
  • Guarantees the protective and productive
    capabilities of Forests with respect to soil and
    water resources. Catastrophic forest fires, poor
    farming practices, erosion from overgrazing and
    stream damage and soil compaction through poor
    timber harvesting practices can reduce water
    quality and soil productivity.

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4A Indicators
  • Soil Moisture.
  • Soil compaction
  • Status of Erosion
  • Run-off (Water Yield)
  • Soil pH
  • Soil Organic Carbon
  • Nutrient Status of the Soil
  • Soil Flora, Fauna and Microbes

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4 B Indicators
  • Level of Water Table
  • Sediment Load
  • Change in forest land Area Integrated with Soil
    and Water Management
  • Change in Water Bodies in the Forest Areas
  • Change in the Forest Area Managed for Protective
    Functions
  • Change in the Physical Properties of Soil
    resulting from Human Activities

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Criterion 5 Maintenance of the Productive
Capacity of Forest Ecosystem
  • Expects that timber and other forest resources
    are not being harvested unsustainably from a
    given forest area. It is important to note that
    sustainability issues apply not only to volume
    production, but also to wood quality and non-wood
    forest products.

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5A Indicators
  • Area and growing stock of plantations of native
    and exotic species.
  • Area of forest land and net area of forest
    availability for timber production.
  • Annual removal of wood products compared to
    volume determined to be sustained
  • Supply and demand projection of forest products
  • Trend of annual removal of NWFP.
  • Area allocated for wood fuels production and
    annual consumption of wood fuels

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5B Indicators
  • Volume of growing stock available for timber
    production
  • Natural regeneration status
  • Increment of wood and non-wood products
  • Area of afforestation and new plantations
  • Level of material and technological inputs
  • Extent of protection measures
  • Level of tangible benefits

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Criterion6Maintenance and Enhancement of
Long-Term Multiple Socio-Economic Benefits to
Meet the Needs of Society
  • Considers that forests provide social benefits
    such as employment, recreation opportunities,
    cultural and spiritual values and at the same
    time provide such economic benefits as
    timber/non-timber resources and investment in the
    forest sector.

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6 A Indicators
  • Aggregate and per capita wood and non-wood
    consumption
  • Import and export of wood and non-wood forest
    products
  • Recorded and unrecorded removals of wood and
    NWFPs
  • Direct employment in forestry and forest
    industries
  • Contribution of forest to the income of forest
    dependent people.

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6 B Indicators
  • Value and volume of woods and wood products
    production from forestlands.
  • Percentage of forest area managed for services,
    in relation to the total area of forest land.
  • Percentage of the total area managed for
    cultural, social and spiritual needs and values.
  • Extent to which, marketing practices support the
    conservation and rational utilization of forest
    resources.

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6 C Indicators
  • Well-being in terms of livelihood, recreation,
    cultural and aesthetic needs
  • Degree of economic, social, gender and
    participatory equity.
  • Conflict management mechanisms
  • Capacity to measure and monitor changes in
    current marketing practices of forest products.
  • Value and quantity of N.W.F.P.

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6 D Indicators
  • Changes in the percentage of the people directly
    or indirectly dependent on forest economy.
  • Value and volume of wood and wood production of
    trees outside forest used for subsistence.
  • Impact of Marketing Functions on SFM
  • Impact of Substitutional effect on SFM
  • Impact of trade barriers on SFM

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7. Policy, Legal and Institutional Framework
  • Existence of policy and level of policy
    implementation are conducive to sustainable
    forest management. Forest policy must be capable
    of addressing the issues related to the forest
    management, supportiveness of forest management
    laws and regulations, provide the mechanism of
    monitoring of policy implementation and revision,
    endow with the opportunities for public access to
    the information, and encourage the induction of
    new technology to the sustainable development of
    forest management. Furthermore, a good forest
    policy must develop scientific understanding of
    forest ecosystem characteristics and functions
    and must attract the private investment and must
    have the flexibility to address the issues
    related to natural disturbances and strengthen
    the linkages between producers and users of wood
    and wood products.

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7A. INDCATORS
  • Existing policy and legal framework
  • Level of community, NGO and private sector
    participation
  • Investment in research and development
  • Human resource capacity building efforts
  • Forest resource accounting
  • Monitoring and Evaluation mechanisms
  • Status of information dissemination and
    utilization
  • Change in forest area as a result of incentives
    in the policy.
  • Change in the livelihood of people living in the
    vicinity of forests (Communities) after
    the announcement of new policy.

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7B INDCATORS
  • Level of investment attracted in the field of
    forestry and allied disciplines.
  • How policy has encouraged the principle of
    multiple uses so to produce a sustained yield of
    products and services?
  • Role of Policy in increasing or decreasing the
    overall share of forestry in the GDP of the
    country.
  • Extent to which institution and policy supports
    conservation and sustainable forest management of
    forests.
  • Stakeholders satisfaction with policy making
    process.
  • Compliance with forest management legislation and
    customary laws.

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Sustainable Forest Management
'The stewardship and use of forests and forest
land in a way and at a rate, that maintains their
biodiversity, productivity, regeneration
capacity, vitality and their potential to fulfill
now and in the future, relevant ecological,
economic and social functions, at local, national
and global levels and does not cause damage to
other ecosystems. (Ministerial Conferences on
the Protection of Forests in Europe, 1993)
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Other similar inter-governmental processes
  • Montreal process
  • Near East Process, Lepaterique Process,
  • Regional Initiative of Dry Forests in Asia,
  • ITTO Criteria and Indicators for Sustainable
    Management of Natural Tropical Forests,
  • Criteria and Indicators for Sustainable
    Management in Dry-zone Africa,
  • Tarapoto Proposal Criteria and Indicators for
    the Sustainable Management of Amazonian Forests,
  • African Timber Organization Principles, Criteria
    and Indicators for Sustainable Management of
    Natural Forests

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Dr. K.M. Suleman
  • Presented By

DirectorForest Products Research
DivisionPakistan Forest Institute Peshawar
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