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Wood Recycling

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Title: Wood Recycling


1
Wood Recycling
  • Used wood, like paper, is a valued economic and
    raw material asset
  • The American Forest Paper Association (AFPA)
    developed the National Wood Recycling Directory
  • Already having surpassed a national paper
    recovery goal of 40, AFPA is leading a new
    effort to recover 50 for recycling and reuse
  • LETS MAKE IT GLOBAL

2
Paper Recycling
  • The Sustainable Forest Initiative in the US and
    Canada
  • In 2005, a record 51.5 percent of the paper
    consumed in the U.S. (51.3 million tons) was
    recovered for recycling.
  • The goal is 55 percent recovery by 2012.
  • LETS MAKE IT GLOBAL

3
Case Study -  Ecopapel
  • Ecopapel began in the coastal city of Bahía de
    Caráquez, Ecuador, as a means of using a waste
    product to create ethical, alternative employment
    for impoverished families affected by
    environmental degradation mangrove destruction
    and dry tropical forest destruction.
  • The project recycles waste paper into beautifully
    designed paper and cards complete with hand
    applied dried flowers.

4
Global Paper and Wood Recycling Program
  • Implement fines for not recycling enforced by
    each country
  • Develop a global industry connected to paper and
    wood recycling
  • Will provide new jobs
  • Will slow down the speed of Forest destruction

5
Economic Value of Natural Resources
  • The economic concept of value is human driven
    meaning that goods and services are not
    considered to have value unless humans place
    value on them
  • Intrinsic value - environmental resources have
    value regardless of whether or not humans place
    values on them.
  • Economic valuations of forest goods and services
    are based on the notion of willingness to pay
    which, in turn, is based on the measurement of
    individuals' preferences,

6
http//ww.cserge.ucl.ac.uk/Value_of_Forests.pdf
7
Changes in Carbon with Land use conversion
http//www.cserge.ucl.ac.uk/Value_of_Forests.pdf
8
Carbon Trading
  • Carbon markets have existed since 1989 and refer
    to the sums of money that corporations and
    governments have been willing to invest in order
    to sequester carbon or prevent its emission.
  • More sophisticated markets with better emissions
    trading schemes need to develop (i.e. through the
    Kyoto Protocol)
  • If there are no limitations placed on worldwide
    carbon trading, carbon credits will exchange at
    just under 10 per tC
  • When applying carbon-trading prices. Values of
    2000/ha can be reached for closed primary and
    secondary forest.

9
New Laws
  • Brazil's Congress recently approved a new public
    forest concessions law as an important step to
    fight illegal deforestation and to better manage
    public forests for sustainable production.

10
Slowing the destruction
  • 1995 was record year for amount of land cleared.
    Studies show that the rate has then increased,
    but has decreased over the past 2 years

11
New Laws
  • A National Forest Development Fund will also be
    created to manage funds derived from managing the
    public forest concession. The Forest Fund will
    receive 70 per cent of all income, with the other
    30 per cent going to IBAMA, the country's
    official environmental agency, to be used for
    patrolling activities.
  • Increased funding will allow more patrols to
    crackdown on illegal activates within the
    Brazilian Amazon region.

12
New Laws
  • The proposed law will now go to the Brazilian
    Senate for final approval. If all goes as
    expected, the first concessions may be signed in
    the second semester of 2006.
  • http//www.panda.org/news_facts/newsroom/news/inde
    x.cfm?uNewsID21811

13
Increase Crop Productivity
  • Increasing productivity of cleared rainforest
    lands is possible using improved technology to
    generate higher yielding crops.
  • Use hybridized crops that grow better in degraded
    rain forest soils. This make the plots viable for
    a longer period. Also, crop rotation could be
    used to replace lost nutrients

14
Rehabilitate Cleared Lands
  • The restoration of entire ecosystems is most
    possible in regions where parts or at least
    remnants of the original forest still remain and
    there are few human population pressures.
  • Small clearings surrounded by forest recover
    quickly and large sections may recover in time
    with some assistance in the reforestation
    process. 14

15
Rehabilitate Cleared Lands
  • After several years, a once barren field can once
    again support vegetation in the form of pioneer
    species and secondary growth. Although the
    secondary forest will be low in diversity and
    poorly developed, the forest cover will be
    adequate for some species to return (assuming
    they still exist). In addition, the newly
    forested patch can be used for the sustainable
    harvest of forest products and low intensity
    logging.

16
Protection and Management of Remaining Forests
  • The United Nations Conference on the Environment
    and Development (UNCED) endorsed the goal that
    nations protect 12 of their area to conserve the
    natural flora and fauna. Although agreed to in
    principle, this good intention still falls far
    short of being a reality.
  • Greater support is needed
  • Adopt joint forest management and/or model forest
    approaches
  • Ex. India, Zimbabwe, and Honduras have developed
    new approaches to resource-sharing and
    co-management. (Agreements between the government
    and the local communities)

17
Agro-forestry
  • Practice of growing trees with agricultural crops
    or livestock on the same parcel of land
  • Examples windbreaks and hedgerows
  • Proven itself to be an effective tool for
    improving land use and for increasing overall
    agricultural productivity
  • Particularly appropriate for resource-poor
    farmers who cannot afford the escalating cost of
    fertilizers, pesticides, improved seeds, and
    other modern farm inputs
  • Many agroforestry extension projects have
    successfully increased crop production by 25 to
    100 percent by using multipurpose trees to arrest
    soil erosion, enhance soil fertility, and provide
    a favourable micro-climate for crops and
    livestock

attra.ncat.org
18
Works Cited
  • American Forest and Paper Association
  • The Value of Forest Ecosystems
  • http//www.riomuchacho.com/html/ecopapeleng.html
  • http//www.cserge.ucl.ac.uk/Value_of_Forests.pdf
  • CIDA Forestry Advisors Network -
    http//www.rcfa-cfan.org/english/issues.12-7.html
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