Action needed to stop the destruction of Asia’s forests
Urgent action needed to stop the destruction of
Asia’s forests and meet the 2030 development
agenda
15/05/2017 Colombo, Sri Lanka -
The destruction of forests in many Asian countries
continues apace, raising fears that one of the world’s key
Sustainable Development Goals may not be
achieved by the 2030 deadline, the UN’s Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO) warned today.
When the
SDGs were formulated and agreed by 193 countries in 2015,
forests were explicitly mentioned in order that they be
aided through the protection, restoration and promotion of
sustainable forests while halting and reversing associated
land degradation and the loss of biodiversity.
“While
forests are critical to achieving the SDGs, they continue to
be degraded and lost at a rate of 3.3 million hectares per
year,” said Patrick Durst, Senior Forestry Officer at the
FAO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific. “In this
region, forests continue to be converted to agriculture,
destroyed and replaced by man-made infrastructure, housing,
mining, and other land uses. Forest fires also continue to
pose a threat to the region”.
Covering one-third of the
earth’s surface, forests provide an invaluable variety of
social, economic and environmental benefits. Forests and
trees sustain and protect all life in invaluable ways. They
provide the clean air that we breathe and the water that we
drink. Home to more than 80 percent of land animals and
plants, forests safeguard the planet’s biodiversity and
act as our natural defence against climate change. A third
of the world's biggest cities, including Mumbai, Bogotá and
New York, obtain much of their drinking water directly from
forested areas. In short, life on earth is made possible and
sustainable thanks to forests and trees.
Forests
and poverty reduction
Forests also play a major
role in supporting human livelihoods. “SDG 1 is about
ending poverty and forests have a lot to contribute,” said
Nina Brandstrup, FAO Representative in Sri Lanka.
“Globally, 1.3 billion people, mostly in developing
countries, are estimated to be ‘forest peoples’, who
depend on forests for their livelihoods and income.
Twenty-eight percent of the total income of households
living in or near forests come from forest and environmental
income. Ending poverty (SDG 1) would need to take the health
of our forests into account and engage those ‘forest
peoples’ directly.”
According to FAO’s Global
Forest Resource Assessment in 2015, forests continue to be
lost in many countries of the Asia-Pacific region, including
Sri Lanka, that loses 6.6 thousand ha annually. Degradation
of forest quality further decreases the forests’ capacity
to provide goods and services necessary for human survival.
These losses will be more acutely felt as the demand for
forest products steadily rises in the
future.
Countries are taking
action
While most countries in the Asia-Pacific
region continue to struggle in their responses to forest
loss, some are taking positive action. China and Viet Nam
have established impressive reforestation programmes and are
actually increasing the amount of forested
land.
Meantime, the Government of Sri Lanka has announced
plans to increase the country’s forest cover by as much as
35 percent – and to do so inclusively with the people that
will benefit most.
“To reach our target, it is
essential to address poverty as it is one of the major
drivers of deforestation and forest degradation,” said
Anura Sathurusinghe, Conservator General of Forests and Head
of the Sri Lanka Forest Department. “We
engage people in policy processes through discussions to
solicit their valuable inputs and recommendations,” he
added.
Focusing on SDGs and poverty reduction, the
Government of Sri Lanka and FAO are organizing the Tenth
Executive Forest Policy Course for forestry leaders in the
Asia-Pacific region. Twenty-four forestry leaders, with a
near gender-balance (11 women), from 15 countries are
participating in the course, with the theme
“Revisiting the poverty alleviation agenda in
the context of SDGs: opportunities and challenges for
Asia-Pacific forestry”.
While few in
number, these 24 senior participants are primarily senior
officials dealing with land use and forestry policies in
their countries. They are joined by well-known experts and
resource persons in the field and, together, will deliberate
on future challenges and policies that will be required to
enhance the role of forests in poverty reduction and to meet
the objectives of the SDGs.
The course is jointly
organized by FAO, the Asia-Pacific Forest Policy Think Tank,
the Forest Department of Ministry of Mahaweli
Development and Environment of Sri Lanka and APAFRI.
http://www.fao.org/asiapacific/news/detail-events/en/c/884778/