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Asian Forest, Biodiversity and Sustainable Development

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Title: Asian Forest, Biodiversity and Sustainable Development


1
Asian Forest, Biodiversity and Sustainable
Development
  • by
  • Percy E. Sajise
  • Regional Director
  • IPGRI-APO
  • Serdang, Malaysia
  • Email P.Sajise_at_cgiar.org

2
Outline
  • Asian Forest Status and Concerns
  • Policy Platforms for Forest Conservation and
    Management
  • Sustainable Development
  • Forest Biodiversity and Sustainable Development
  • Does Biodiversity Always Directly Relate to
    Sustainable Development
  • Patterns of Biodiversity Utilization
  • Conclusion

3
Several Countries in Asia are Mega Centers of
Biodiversity Example- India- 2-4 global area
7-8 of recorded species of the world Indonesia
1.3 of global area 17 unique species
4
Total Forest Area in Asia Almost the Same 15
Years Ago Concern Rapid Decrease in Area of
Primary Forest
5
Deforestation Continue to Increase In Asia Net
Loss Offset by Increased Afforestation in China
6
Increase in Areas Designated for Conservation of
Biological Diversity and for Protective Purpose
7
Table 2. Trends in Carbon Stocks in forest
biomass, 1990-2005
Regions Carbon in Living Biomass (Gt) Carbon in Living Biomass (Gt) Carbon in Living Biomass (Gt)
Regions 1990 2000 2005
East Asia 7.2 8.4 9.1
South and Southeast Asia 32.3 25.5 21.8
Total Asia 41.1 35.6 32.6
Total Africa 65.8 62.2 60.8
Total South American 97.7 94.2 91.5
Source FAO, Global Forest Resources
Assessment, 2005
8
Forests in Asia Largely Remain in Public Hands
9
Wood Removal in Asian Forests has Decreased Over
the last 15 Years but NWFPs have Increased
10
Productive Function Significant decrease in
forest areas Designated as production
forest. Slowly being replaced by
plantation Forest Concern Stability of
production of Plantation Forest as generally
monocultures
11
Protective Function
  • Increased forest areas designated as protection
    forests- increased awareness
  • of forest role in soil and water conservation
  • Forest plantations designated as protection
    forests increasing in India, China, Thailand and
    Vietnam

12
Socio-Economic Functions
  • Value of total wood removals decreased for Asia
    due to lower values reported from Japan,
    Indonesia and Malaysia.
  • Significant increase in the value of NWFPs in the
    form of food, exudates, ornamental plants
    bushmeat and other products.

13
Policy Platforms in Forest Conservation and
Management
  • Agenda 21 and Forest Principles
  • Provided the platforms in directing countries to
    increase efforts to maintain and increase forest
    cover and productivity
  • Non binding but enhanced formulation of national
    forestry programs

14
Convention on Biological Diversity
  • Biodiversity is sovereign rights of countries
  • Places obligations to countries or Contracting
    Parties for formulating programs for biodiversity
    conservation and sustainable use.
  • Article 8a and 8f specifically required
    Contracting Parties to promote protection and
    rehabilitation of ecosystems
  • COP6 adopted a forest biodiversity action-based
    work program which Contracting Parties have to
    report compliance and progress in their Annual
    Reports
  • Legally binding

15
Framework Convention on Climate Change and
Forests (FCCC)
  • Clearly elaborated as the Kyoto Protocol in 1997
  • Objective is to stabilize concentration of
    greenhouse gases where forests are seen as a
    major element
  • Afforestation, reforestation and improved forest
    conservation and management seen to offset
    emission targets and has to be promoted

16
Convention to Combat Desertification and Forests
  • Legally binding
  • Objective is to combat desertification and to
    mitigate effects of drought in an integrated
    manner
  • Adoption of national action programmes to address
    underlying causes of desertification, drought and
    deforestation

17
Trade Related Agreements
  • International Tropical Timber Agreement (ITTA)-
    foster cooperation in trade and utilization of
    tropical timber with emphasis on sustainability.
    ITTO broke new grounds by formulating and
    publishing the first set of Criteria and
    Indicators for Sustainable Forest Management.
  • Convention on International Trade in Endangered
    Species of Wild Flora and Fauna (CITES)- Provides
    a forum and generate a list of species requiring
    various controls in trade to balance trade and
    conservation concerns.

18
International Processes
  • Intergovernmental Panel on Forests (IPF) and the
    Intergovernmental Forum on Forests (IFF)- forum
    to discuss varying issues on forest and forest
    management.
  • United Nations Forum on Forests- to develop a
    legal framework on all forests
  • A significant output is on Criteria and
    Indicators for Sustainable Forest Management.

19
Sustainable Development
  • A complex, multi-dimensional, time-determined and
    highly contextual state or condition adhering to
    the basic principle that the natural resource
    base must be utilized in a manner that its
    ability to provide current and future goods and
    services useful to human society is not
    impaired.
  • It is a type of development which is
    economically viable, environmentally appropriate
    and socially acceptable.

20
Figure 1. Conceptual model of the relationship
between biodiversity and sustainable development
Technological
Natural Resources
Sustainable Development
  • Ecosystem(s)
  • Community
  • Species
  • Genetic

Socio-economic cultural
Biodiversity
21
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22
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23
Conservation Strategy for In Situ Conservation of
Forest Diversity
  • Strategy in the form of a Guideline Represents
    the Technology
  • Natural Resource Base- represents the
    requirements of the site, the reproductive
    patterns of the species, the diversity factors to
    maintain and others
  • Socio-cultural- policy, incentives and capacity

24
Biodiversity as a Critical Element of Sustainable
Development
  • Biodiversity was transformed from an esoteric
    ecological term to a global concern because of
  • Greater recognition for what human society can
    derive from it in the face of rapidly increasing
    population and
  • Dwindling natural resources as well as ecosystem
    destruction
  • Globally enshrined in the CBD

25
Cardamon in Midmontane Forest in Sri Lanka
26
  • Global biodiversity has greatly shrunk
  • 90 of world food supply come from
  • 20 species of plants
  • 14 species of domesticated animals
  • However, it does not mean that the so-called
    lesser species are not important

27
  • Beneficial biological agents such as pollinators
    US 40B per year
  • Biological nitrogen fixation agents US 50B per
    year
  • All in all, agents of biodiversity services
    account for US 100-200B per year in the U.S.
    alone!

28
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29
Relationship
  • Durian flowers pollinated by bats at 1-2 am
  • What is the pollinator at this time? Bats
  • Where do bats live? In limestone caves
  • What is the material used for making cement? Lime
    from limestone
  • What happens if construction demands more cement?
    More bat caves will be destroyed
  • What will happen next? No more bat pollinators,
    NO MORE DURIAN FRUITS

30
  • Biodiversity also plays an important role in
    ensuring that the targets of the Millennium
    Development Goals (MDG) for Sustainable
    Development set by the UN are successfully
    achieved

31
  • Figure 2. Examples of the Critical Role of
    Biodiversity and sustainable Ecosystem Management
    under WEHAB Priority Areas

32
Does Biodiversity Always Relate to Sustainable
Development?
  • Types of biodiversity
  • Natural honed by the process of natural
    selection and co-adaptation
  • Human-managed true mainly for agrobiodiversity
    can be good or non-sustainable biodiversity

33
  • Biodiversity is not just about the number of
    species or adding more species. It is good
    biodiversity if
  • It is a functional diversity governed by
    homeostatic and well-ordered relationships among
    component species at all levels genetic,
    species, communities, ecosystems, etc
  • It is managed by traditional knowledge or
    knowledge systems based on these positive
    relationships
  • It is biodiversity of a natural resource base
    which is positively interacting with technology
    and the socio-cultural elements of the ecosystem

34
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35
  • Biodiversity interpreted as simply increasing the
    numbers and kinds of species of living organisms
    does not always lead to Sustainable Development
  • The case of Eucalyptus in Thailand and other
    Southeast Asian countries

36
Patterns of Biodiversity Utilization
  • Crop and Animal Improvement through conventional
    breeding and others such as use of root stocks
  • Biotechnology or genetic engineering- needs a
    strong risk assessment biosafety regulation

37
Conclusion
  • Asian forests over the last 15 years have
    experienced positive and negative changes
  • Forest management has shifted from purely
    production to multiple use management
  • It has also shifted to more sustainable
    management objectives

38
Conclusion
  • Sustainable orientation anchored on the
    multifunctional role of forests at all levels
    local, national, regional and global
  • It is recognized as a major ecosystem which hosts
    biodiversity or the web of life
  • Basic relationships between different elements of
    sustainable development where biodiversity is a
    major component needs to be better understood to
    attain the goal of sustainable development

39
Biodiversity is the Life Insurance of Life
Itself Mc Neil and Shei (2002)
40
  • Thank you..
  • Terima Kasih
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