INTERNATIONAL TROPICAL TIMBER ORGANIZATION IN SUPPORT OF TROPICAL TIMBER AND FOREST THE ITTO’S EXPERIENCE By Amha bin Buang Assistant Director (Economic Information and Market Intelligence) International Tropical.
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INTERNATIONAL TROPICAL TIMBER ORGANIZATION IN SUPPORT OF TROPICAL TIMBER AND FOREST THE ITTO’S EXPERIENCE By Amha bin Buang Assistant Director (Economic Information and Market Intelligence) International Tropical Timber Organization (ITTO) Yokohama, Japan Bringing Tropical Forests under Sustainable Management MAGNITUDE OF THE CHALLENGES NO TIMBER WITHOUT TREES Study on the Status of Sustainable Forest Management (1989) Main Conclusions i. The extent of tropical forests being at an operational scale for the sustainable production of timber was, on a world scale, negligible; ii. Many countries had the intention, expressed in their legislation, to manage sustainably; in a number of these countries, partial forms of sustainable management were being practiced; iii. There seemed to be some awareness in these countries that action was needed to attain sustainable management; iv. Progress in establishing stable sustainable systems was so low that it was having very little impact on the state of tropical forests; v. Comprehensive and urgent measures were necessary if the tropical timber trade was to continue in the long-term; and vi. The future existence of tropical forests depended on the establishment of sustainable systems of management. Progress Towards the Achievement of the ITTO Year 2000 Objective PROGRESS PROBLEMS I. Producing Members • Policy and legislative reform • Strategies not fully acted upon • Reorganization of administrative arrangements • Shortage of personnel and finance • New strategies and master plans • Illegal logging and poaching • Establishment of PFE • Inadequate management of protected areas • Consultation with local communities • Application and enforcement of guidelines and regulations • Expanding forest lands for conservation • Broadening awareness about SFM • Usage of ITTO guidelines, C&I • Establishing a sound basis for forest harvesting • Development of standards for forest management • Implementing strict engineering specification for road design • Possibility of timber certification • Greater practices of RIL • Increased awareness about SFM • Securing and protecting PFE • Increased value-added exports STATUS OF TROPICAL FOREST MANAGEMENT 2005 CURRENT STATUS • Forests cover 30% of world’s land area • World’s total forest area continues to decline; albeit at slower rate • Critical regions having net loss mainly in tropics: Africa, South America, Oceania, Central America • Tropical forests remain the most vulnerable to deforestation, degradation, encroachment, over-harvesting, illegal harveting UNDERLYING CAUSES • Virtually all tropical forests are in developing countries • Requirements for sustainable management of (natural) tropical forests are far more complex and demanding • Sustainable (natural) tropical forest management is far less attractive in terms of financial returns vis-à-vis other landuses International Tropical Timber Organization (ITTO) • International intergovernmental organization • Established by ITTA,1983, legally binding, negotiated under aegis of UNCTAD • Administers/supervises subsequent ITTAs operation of ITTA,1983 and • Operationalised in 1986 with headquarters in Yokohama, Japan • Currently operates under ITTA,1994 while ITTA,2006 enters into force ITTO: STRUCTURE AND FUNCTIONS Non-Member Governments Trade/Industry/ Private Sector International Organizations, Bodies, Agencies, Treaties, Initiatives International Tropical Timber Council (ITTC) Consumer Members Committee on Economic Information and Market Intelligence Producer Caucus Committee on Reforestation and Forest Management Expert Panel for the Technical Appraisal of Project and Pre-project Proposals Informal Advisory Group Bureau Fellowship Panel Trade Advisory Group Civil Society Advisory Group Producer Members Consumer Caucus Civil Society Committee on Forest Industry Executive Director and Secretariat Committee on Finance and Administration ITTO OBJECTIVES Promote expansion and diversification of international trade in tropical timber ITTO Objective 2000 Achieve exports of tropical timber from sustainably managed sources Promote sustainable management of tropical forests Promote processing of tropical timber in producing countries ITTO’s POLICY WORK AND PROJECT ACTIVITIES ITTA ITTO Action Plan ITTC Decisions ITTO Biennial Work Programme POLICY WORK Policy consultation, deliberation, development Policy research, studies Normative work – guidelines, Criteria & Indicators, Manuals Monitoring, assessment and reporting Communication and outreach materials ITTO Fellowship Programme APPROACHES Consultation Cooperation Collaboration Partnership Capacity-building – human/institutional Supportive measures Enabling measures Implementation oriented PROJECT ACTIVITIES Country-driven: initiation, implementation, ownership 6 month project cycle address beneficiary needs and priorities grant funding 7400 projects (US$270 million) 150 projects on-going engaging >500 local full time professionals Major Areas of ITTO’s Work ECONOMIC INFORMATION AND MARKET INTELLIGENCE REFORESTATION AND FOREST MANAGEMENT FOREST INDUSTRY ITTO Objective 2000, diagnostic missions, reporting Annual Review and Assessment Forest and Land Use Planning Tropical Forest Update Reduced Impact Logging Market Access Market Information Service Transboundary Conservation Areas Criteria and Indicators of SFM Auditing Systems Market Studies Timber Market Reviews ITTO Annual Market Discussion Illegal Trade Trade Data Discrepancies Studies Timber Tracking Certification Inclusion of Tropical Timber Species in Appendices of CITES Forest Statistical Systems Forest Law Enforcement and Governance Illegal Logging Best Practices Secondary Tropical Forests, Restoration of degraded tropical forests Conservation of Biological Diversity Forest Plantation Climate Change Impact on Forests Mangroves Promotion of Private Investment Community-based forest industries Ecosystem Services Community Forests Efficiency in Processing/Utilization Value-Adding Non-Timber Forest Products ITTO’s WORK OF DIRECT RELEVANT TO CLIMATE CHANGE • . . . Monitor implications for resource base of climate change . . . . and contribution of resource base to mitigate effects of climate change.” [ITTO Yokohama Action Plan, Section 3.2, Goal 1, Action 3, ITTO Biennial Work Programme 2006-2007, CRF(i)] • Promote implementation of ITTO Guidelines for the Restoration, Management and Rehabilitation of Degraded and Secondary Tropical Forests • ITTO International Workshop on Climate Change and Forest Sector: CDM in Tropical Countries, Seoul, September 2004 • PPD 47/02 (F) – ‘Promotion of CDM in the Framework of SFM with Local Communities Involvement’ (Indonesia) • PD 54/99 Rev.1 (F) – ‘Alternative Financing Model for SFM in San Nicolas, Colombia’ • PD 240/03 Rev.1 (F) – ‘Alternative Financing Model for SFM in San Nicolas, Colombia – Phase II: Non-Kyoto Rehabilitation Areas’ • PD 359/05 Rev.1 (F) – ‘Building Capacity to Develop and Implement AR-CDM of the Kyoto Protocol in Tropical Forestry Sector • PD 337/05 Rev.3 (F) - • Regional Workshop on Perspectives of CDM Forestry Projects in Asia and the Pacific, Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 22-24 March 2006 • Guidebook for the Formulation of Afforestation and Reforestation Projects under CDM International Workshop on CDM – Opportunities and Challenges for the Forest Industry Sector in Sub-Saharan Tropical Africa, Accra, Ghana, 2-5 October 2006 INTERNATIONAL TROPICAL TIMBER ORGANIZATION Thank you www.itto.or.jp