BTG Pactual 10th Latin American CEO Conference€¦ · Our mills tons of market pulp MWm average...
Transcript of BTG Pactual 10th Latin American CEO Conference€¦ · Our mills tons of market pulp MWm average...
BTG Pactual 10th Latin American CEO Conference
September, 2019
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Disclaimer
This communication contains certain statements that are “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the
Securities Act and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Some of these forward-looking statements are
identified with words like “believe,” “may,” “could,” “would,” “might,” “possible,” “will,” “should,” “expect,” “intend,” “plan,” “anticipate,”
“estimate”, “potential”, “outlook” or “continue,” the negative of these words, other terms of similar meaning or the use of future
dates. Forward-looking statements in this communication include, without limitation, statements regarding the implementation of
operating and financing strategies and initiatives, including with respect to the integration of Fibria’s operations and expected
potential synergies, plans with respect to capital expenditures, and factors or trends affecting financial condition, liquidity or
results of operations. Such statements reflect the current views of management and are subject to a number of risks and
uncertainties, including changes in prices and customer demand for our products, changes in raw material costs, pricing actions by
competitors, changes in the rates of exchange of the Brazilian real against the US dollar, and general changes in the economic
environment in Brazil, emerging markets or internationally. Such forward-looking statements are qualified by the inherent risks
and uncertainties surrounding future expectations generally, and actual results could differ materially from those currently
anticipated due to such risks and uncertainties. There is no guarantee that the expected events, trends or results will actually occur.
The statements information, opinions and forward-looking statements contained in this presentation speak only as at the date of
this presentation and should thus be considered in the context of the circumstances prevailing at the time. They are based on many
assumptions and factors, including general economic and market conditions, industry conditions, and operating factors, and are
subject to change without notice. Any changes in such assumptions or factors could cause actual results to differ materially from
current expectations. Suzano does not undertake any obligation to update any information, opinion or forward-looking
statements as a result of new information, future developments or otherwise, except as expressly required by law. All information,
opinions and forward-looking statements in this communication are qualified in their entirety by this cautionary statement.
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The New Suzano
3
Our plantations
hectares of planted and certified areasequivalent to 200x Manhattan
m³/ha/yearaverage productivity
structural average radius
harvesting and inbound logistics
eucalyptus genetic base
areas
Geographically
An
first class assets base
4
Our mills
tons of market pulp
MWmaverage
equivalent to 1.4 mnpeople town
tons of paper
pulp
supply chain
An
first class assets base
5
An
first class assets base
Our logistics
served
exportpulp
fully
either close to shore or railway connected
mills
6
pulp integrated
Paper business
clientsBrazilian brands
go-to-market model
Brazilian market share¹
¹ Addressable market.
An
first class assets base
7
Fully integrated
Plantation
Port
Mill
Railway
8
Cash Cost(¹)
1,8
2,0
2,1
2,6
2,7
2,8
3,1
3,7
3,8
10,9
Ilim
Mercer
Stora Enso
UPM
Metsa
April
Arauco
CMPC
APP + PE
Suzano
¹ Source: Hawkins Wright December 2018 (CIF Europe – USD/ton). ² Market pulp capacity production including hardwood and softwood volumes.
Undisputable
in the pulp industry
Top 10(²)
225
293
361 367391
435459
286
341
442 442462
Bra
zil
Ch
ile/U
rug
ua
y
Eu
rop
e
Ind
on
esi
a
Ca
na
da
/US
Oth
er
Asi
a/J
ap
an
Ch
ina
Ea
st E
uro
pe
Ch
ile
Oth
er
Eu
rop
e
Oth
er
Wo
rld
US
/Ca
na
da
Hardwood Softwood
9
709 690 668622
2015 2016 2017 2018
Consistently
cash costR$/ton¹
¹ Cash production cost ex-downtimes. Pro forma basis of Suzano Papel e Celulose and Fibria Celulose cash production cost (R$/ton). Figures are adjusted by Brazilian inflation (IPCA) which represents R$ 104/t in 2015, R$ 52/t in 2016 and R$ 57/t in 2017.
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Synergies
11
Structural competitiveness boosted by
¹ Total Steady State.
Capture Profile1
R$800MM R$900MM per year¹
2019 2020 2021
40%
90%100%
G&A
Supply Chain
Forestry
Industrial
Dec / Dec / Dec /
Operational Synergies
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Selected
examples
Benefit
InitiativeReduction in products (SKUs) per plant
Lower consumption of chemicals
Higher OEE¹
Industrial
Wood supply optimization
Wood logistics cost reduction
Forestry
Routes Optimization
Operational scale expansion
Transshipment costs reduction
Logistic /
Commercial
Contractual parameters equalization
Lower cost in industrial and forestry inputs and fuel
Procurement
Organizational Structure adjustment
Headcount reduction
G&A
Structural competitiveness boosted by
¹ Overall equipment effectiveness
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Preliminary Goodwill¹ R$ 8.1 bn
Total R$ 26.5 bn
Adjusted Balance Sheet to fair value¹ R$ 18.4 bn
Accounting effect: EBT reduction
Tax effect: taxable base reduction
¹ Based on preliminary PPA as disclosed on 2018 Financial Statements – Note 32 (ii).
² Estimate considering preliminary 10 years depreciation period.
³ Estimate considering preliminary 10 years fiscal amortization period.
Average² annual deductible expenses of R$1.2 bn¹
Average3 annual fiscal deduction of R$0.8 bn¹
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Resulting Company
15
mostly from international markets
6.1 6.15.6
7.0
8.7
2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
Net revenues (US$ billion)
Asia
Europe
Americas
Note: Pro forma figures of Suzano and Fibria historical data.Average exchange rate of R$ 2.35 in 2014, R$ 3.33 in 2015, R$ 3.49 in 2016, R$ 3.19 in 2017 and R$ 3.65 in 2018.
Pulp
Others
P&W
25%Tissue
57%
Specialties
15%3%
Note: The data represents simple sum out of the sold volumes of Suzano + Fibria and also considers Klabin’s volumes.
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Adjusted EBITDA¹ and Margin¹R$ and US$ million and (%)
16,36114,799
4,477 3,830
52%48%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
0
5.000
10.000
15.000
20.000
25.000
2018 LTM2Q19
12,48110,920
3,415 2,826
0
0,1
0,2
0,3
0,4
0,5
0,6
0,7
0,8
0,9
1
0
5.000
10.000
15.000
20.000
2018 LTM2Q19
Operational Cash Generation²R$ and US$ million
¹ Excludes sales from the commercial agreement with Klabin. ² Operational Cash Generation = Adjusted EBITDA less Sustaining CAPEX. Note: for 2018 and LTM 2Q19 data is pro forma, considering the sum of the results of the companies, or weighted where applicable 17
~ R$ 700 million EBITDA
Hedging Policy
Debt Hedge
Target: Net debt 100% denominated in USD
Operating Hedge
Target: up to 75% of the following 18 months
Current: 74% of net exposure²
¹ Sensitivity at each R$ 0.10/US$ variation
Revenue
COGS
SG&A
Sustaining Capex
88% USD
20% USD
27% USD
11% USD
~ R$ 600 million Operational Cash
Generation
Sensitivity¹
² Net exposure as of August 2019.
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2.080
761
51265
367797
1.916
841 581216 873 344
517
500
707
7,546
2,841
728938
711
1,314
2,416
1,548
8,128
Liquidity 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025onward
¹ PTAX of 3.8322 R$/US$ (06/30/2019)² Total average cost in US$ considering the debt in BRL adjusted by the market swap curve.3 Liquidity position as @2Q19
debt profile
Pro-forma³ Amortization Schedule (US$ million)¹ average debt maturity
US$ 15.8 bn
Average Cost (US$)²:
Figures from the closing of the 1Q19 for comparison purposes.
77% from 2023 onwards(vs. 55% 1Q19)
3
Cash on hand
RCF
Trade Finance
Non-Trade Finance
19
and
Funding sources
Sources
Non Trade Finance Related Bank
Trade Finance Related Bank
32%International Capital Markets
44%Local Capital Markets
17%
7%30%
70%International
Counterpart
Local
As of June 30, 2019. 20
Net Debt (US$ billion)
¹ Operational Cash Flow = Adjusted EBITDA – Sustaining Capex | ² Net Debt and Leverage on June 30, 2019. Considers the adjustments mentioned on amortization schedule slide. | . ³Closing rate (BRL/USD): Jun/19: R$3.83
Jun-19³
13.7
Long-Term Target
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Leverage US$
(Net Debt / Adj. EBITDA)²
3.6x
IndebtednessNet Debt/EBITDA Ratio (in US$):
1.0x to 3.0xNormal Cycle
1.0x to 3.5xInvestment Cycle
Dividend
The lowest between:
25% of the net income or 10% of the Operational Cash Flow Generation¹
Policies
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Capital
¹ States of São Paulo and Maranhão.
2019e
Sustaining 4.0
Forest and Land
Total
Modernization and Expansion
Port Terminals¹
Capex (R$ billion) 2018
3.9
0.62.0
1.41.3
0.40.2
6.47.4
Old New
2019e
3.8
0.4
1.3
0.4
5.9
22
Bonds
23
¹ Issuances with no maturity in 2026 interpolated for comparative purposes; G-spread as of September 10, 2019.Source: Bloomberg.
G-spreads¹ in Brazil
One of the
Rating Outlook
BBB-
BBB-
Stable
Negative
Investment Grade 162
210 213 222
258 267 271288
BRAZIL VALE GERDAU SUZANO KLABIN PETROBRAS BRASKEM BRF
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Source: Bloomberg, as of 08/12/2019
2,5
3,0
3,5
4,0
4,5
5,0
5,5
6,0
Jun-18 Jul-18 Aug-18 Oct-18 Nov-18 Jan-19 Feb-19 Apr-19 May-19 Jul-19
IP 26 (BBB)
Arauco 27 (BBB-)
CMPC 27 (BBB-)
Suzano 26 (BBB-)
Peers
25
Pulp Market
26
on global pulp demand
Source: PPPC S&D 2019.
Hardwood
Softwood
42,8
55,058,9
66,0
2023E2005 2015 2018
+1.2/y
+1.3/y+1.4/y
21,8 24,3 24,9 27,0
2005 2015 2018 2023E
+0.2/y +0.2/y +0.4/y
21,130,8
34,0 39,0
2005 2015 2018 2023E
+1.0/y +1.1/y+1.0/y
By Grade
in million tons
Global Market Pulp Demand
in million tons
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Driven by end-uses
Global Market Pulp Demand by end use
Source: PPPC S&D 2019, Poyry, Hawkins Wright, Suzano BI.
47%
26%
20%
Breakdown
58.9 Demand Annual Growth until 2030million tons
Packaging
Tissue & Fluff
Printing & Writing
Specialty
+2.3%
+2.9%
-0.7%
+0.6%
Paper and paperboard
demand average growth of
until2030
28
Source: RISI
China became the leading consumer of tissue
100
2.100
4.100
6.100
8.100
10.100
12.100
14.100
2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023
Western Europe
North America
China
Tissue Demand by main regionin thousand tons
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market dynamics
Supported by
Chinese Market Pulp Demandin million tons
Source: PPPC S&D 2019, RISI, Hawkins Wright, Suzano BI.
5,8
16,5
19,8
25,3
2005 2015 2018 2023E
+1.1/y
+1.1/y
+1.1/y
Tissue Machine Closures from Environmental Restrictionsin million tons
0,50,6
1,4 1,4 1,5
2018E20172015 2019E2016
Chinese Waste Paper Importsin million tons
29 28 26
17
20162015 20182017 2019-2023E
?
Woodchip Supply Restrictionsin million BDMT
12,4 13,3
6,5 4,5
3,1 3,3
2023E
Southeast Asia
3Chile
2018
Australia
Others25
23
2
Tissue Consumption per Capitain kgs per year
25,6
16,0 15,7
6,7 6,0
North America
West Europe
Japan Latin America
China
30
Source: RISI
Chinese to hardwood chips sourcing
2009-2019YTD US dollars per BDMT, nominal prices CIF Share of pulp capacity based on imported HW chips
Imported HW chips by pulp grade Source of HW chips for the Asia-Pacific Markets, 2019YTD
31
0
0,5
1
1,5
2
2,5
-
200
400
600
800
1.000
1.200
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022
BHKP BHKP adjusted by CPI
Ca
pa
city
Ad
dit
ion
s (‘
00
0 t
on
)(2)
Pu
lp P
rice
s -
CIF
Eu
rop
e (
US
$/t
on
)(2)
No major new capacity in the short term
Metsa
Horizonte 2
APP South Sumatra(1)
Klabin
Guaíba II
Oji Nantong
Montes del Plata
Eldorado
Maranhão
ChenmingZhanjiang
APP Guangxi
Rizhao
TrêsLagoas
KerinciPL3
Fray BentosSanta Fé
Mucuri
Nueva Aldea
Veracel
APP Hainan
Valdivia
JacareiAracruz
7,650 kt 3,600 kt(1) Partially integrated production(2) Sources: Hawkins Wright, Poyry and Suzano(3) Gross capacity, does not consider the closure of Line 1 in Horcones plant (Source: RISI)
MAPA(3)
UPM Uruguay
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33
34
Long term NPV maximization
1 Production capacity depending on conditions of global pulp market, according to Material Fact released on 05/09/2019.
Estimated Market Pulp Production in 20191
million tons
~9.0
2019 production guidance
Preservation of more productive forest base
Wood supply mix management
Gradual implementation during the year
ESG for more valueand less risk
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a
aCEO
Sustainability Committee
Reports to
• Coordinate the Sustainability Strategy throughout the company• Integration of sustainability aspects throughout the company • Transparency and dialogue • Stakeholder relationship and engagement• Implementation social, environmental and sustainability projects• Reporting
Board of directors
Chief Sustainability
Officer
Innovation and Technology
New business Strategy, HR, IT ….
Forest Environment
Social Development
Instituto Ecofuturo
Corporate Sustainability
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April May June July August September October November December
Development of long-term goals and definition of institutional commitments and positions:
Carbon, Biodiversity and Conservation, Waste, Water, Productivity and Communities
1. GROUNDING 2 Engagement
3. LONG TERM GOALS
Benchmarking
Community favorability
Stakeholders consultation
Suzano’s leadership interviews
External Stakeholders:• EUA• Europe• Brazil
3. ROADMAP
Create the company's institutional roadmap and develop Sustainability strategies in conjunction with Business Units
JANUARY 2020
2020
Construction process
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- 100% of the wood used in the production process is controlled (traceability)
- Compliance with the chain of custody management systems Forest Stewardship Council® (FSC®) and Cerflor® / Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC)
- Commitment to prevent sourcing and supply of wood from:
1Illegally harvested wood
2Wood harvested in violation of traditional and human rights
3Wood harvested in forests where high conservation values are threatened by management activities
4Wood harvested in forests being converted to plantations or non-forest use
5Wood from forests in which genetically modified trees are planted
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In the concept of the new economic model, there is no way to exclude the role of the forest regarding climate change
Eucalyptus plantation + native forest preservation = carbon sequestration
Committed to CDP (Climate, Water, Forest) and TCFD
Public engagement
Positive Balance(capture – emissions)
➢ Greenhouse inventories – GHG Protocol methodology (http://www.ghgprotocolbrasil.com.br/?locale=en)
➢ About 90% of Company’s energy requirements based on renewable fuels (black liquor and biomass)
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Sustainable Forest Management Model
❖ Operation takes place in exclusively and already consolidated agricultural and degraded areas
❖ Commited to zero deforestation
❖ Wood purchase policy and forest management plans
❖ Aiming for biodiversity maintenance, soil productivity, water cycle preservation, carbon sequestration and stock, etc.
~40% of its total area devoted to conservation (~900 k hectares)
All Suzano industrial units are certified
- Forest Stewardship Council® (FSC®) and/orCERFLOR® / PEFC
- Traceability of 100% of the total raw material used in operations
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Water body (rivers)
Pulp and paper production
Evaporation
Pulp and paper – final product
20%
80%
- Suzano returns about 80% of the water withdrawn from the river as treated effluent
- High efficiency in the use of water – withdraw is below the BAT of IPPC (Integrated Pollution Prevention and Control), which is within 30-50m³/adt
Recirculation of around 5 times
Returns as treated effluent
Water withdraw22 – 32m³/adt
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❖ Suzano has no genetically modified trees deployed in commercial operations at this time.
❖ Plant biotechnology to improve forest yield and forest protection.
❖ FuturaGene undertakes extensive biosafety evaluation of new varieties, including human and animal safety and environmental impact, under normatives determined by the National Biosafety Technical Commission (CTNBio)
❖ Environmental impact assessment protocol of CTNBio includes studies to evaluate if the GM variety impacts the environment differently from conventional varieties
❖ Policy of open dialogue with multiple stakeholders with respect to the Suzano’s GM program (including NGOs, certification bodies, smallholder farmers, agricultural associations and customers).
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PDRT
Indigenous communities
- Risk and cost reduction: operational and reputational
- Certification demands adherence
- Income generation and education improvement as drivers for life quality increase and financial self-sufficiency
- Open dialogue and programs jointly developed with traditional communities, NGOs, social movements, government and other companies
- Examples:
PDRT
+4,000 familiesAttended
R$ 1,431 Families’ average income
111 communities Attended
Territorial Sustainability
R$ 881 Families’ average income
31 communities Attended9 different Indian ethnicities
2,976 familiesAttended
+1,000 familiesAttended
R$ 1,668 Families’ average income
76 communities Attended
1,664 tons of honey production (30% of São Paulo state production)
Beehives
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in place
Board of Directors Supported by
Up to 10 members
Eligibility assessment
20% independent members
Audit Statutory Committee
Management and Finance Committee
Innovation and Strategy Committee
Sustainability Committee
Talent and Compensation Committee+
Well-balancedManagement
44
Our Future
45
PulpConsumer Goods Paper
Fluff
Lignin
Nanocellulose
Dissolving Pulp
Bio fuel
Bio Composites
Geographic expansion in Brazil
Portfolio expansion
Organic
M&A
Innovation and New Businesses
International Expansion
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47
Backup
48
Mill – Pulp capacity2018 2019 2020
1Q18 2Q18 3Q18 4Q18 1Q19 2Q19 3Q19 4Q19 1Q20 2Q20 3Q20 4Q20
Aracruz - Line A (ES) – 590 kt
Aracruz - Line B (ES) – 830 kt
Aracruz - Line C (ES) – 920 kt
Imperatriz (MA)² – 1,650 kt
Jacareí (SP) – 1,100 kt
Limeira (SP)² – 690 kt
Mucuri - Line 1 (BA)² – 600 kt
Mucuri - Line 2 (BA) – 1,130 kt No downtimes
Suzano (SP)² – 520 kt No downtimes
Três Lagoas - Line 1 (MS) – 1,300 kt
Três Lagoas - Line 2 (MS) – 1,950 kt
Veracel (BA)¹ – 560 kt No downtimes
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Source: Poyry, Hawkins Wright, Suzano BI
Demand Growth 2018-2030
in million tons
60 60 60 61 61 61 62 62 62 63 63 64 64
49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 58 59 60 61 62
166 169 174 178 182 186 191 195 200 205 210 215 220
41 43 44 45 46 48 49 51 52 54 55 57 5999 98 97 96 96 95 94 93 93 92 91 91 90
2025
Tissue & Fluff
2018 20202019
426
P&W
Containerboard
414
2021 2022
479
2023 2024
420
2028 2029 2030
495
Specialty
432 438
Cartonboard
445458451
465 472487
20272026
+80(+1.5%/yr)
50
Share on total fiber consumption
Other
Packaging
Paperboard
ContainerboardTissue
CoatedWoodfree
UncoatedWoodfree
CoatedMechanical
Newsprint
20 40 60 80 1004
0
2
1
3
-3
-1
-2
Average growth of
Source: Poyry(2017)
Est
ima
ted
de
ma
nd
gro
wth
un
til 2
03
0
(%p
.a.)
UncoatedMechanical
Emerging Markets: 2.2% p.a.Mature Markets: -0.2% p.a.
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Source: Poyry, Hawkins Wright and Suzano BI
Others34
Packaging222
Newsprint23
Virgin Pulp
Non-Wood6
Tissue35
2018 Total Paper
Production
Hardwood34
P&W100
Bleached Chemical Pulp (BCP)
Recycled217
Virgin175
Fiber Consumption
Integrated110
Market Pulp65
59Unbleached2
Fluff6
Mechanical4
BCP59
Market Pulp
Softwood20
413 398175
65
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Suzano’s tax structureDescription and Amount Maturity
(-)Deductible accounting expense Annual deduction: R$ 1.2 bn (based on 10yr average) According to assets maturity
(a) EBT As stated in the income statement
(-)(b) Goodwill (Fibria acquisition)Annual deduction: R$ 790 mn (based on 10yr average)
Tax benefit: ~R$ 270 mn2029(1)
(+/-)(c) Exchange variation (cash) ---------- ----------
(+/-)(d) Other ---------- ----------
Tax base before compensations (a) + (b) + (c) + (d)
(e) (-) Tax loss carryforward- Up to 30% of tax base before compensations
- Balance up to jun/19: R$ 1.0 billion (base)Undefined
(f) Tax base Tax base before compensations – tax loss carryforward (e) ----------
(g) Income tax Tax base (f) * 34% ----------
(h) (-) SUDENE 75% reduction of the annual payable Income Tax²2024 - Mucuri line 1 and Imperatriz
2027 – Mucuri line 2
(i) (-) Federal tax credits
Balance jun/2019:- PIS/COFINS: R$ 758 million
- Withholding tax (IR and CSLL): R$ 820 million- Reintegra: R$ 113 million
Undefined
Cash Tax Income Tax (g) – SUDENE (h) - Tax Credits (i)
¹ Based on PPA as disclosed on Financial Statements (ii) | ²Benefit does not include CSLL (Social Contribution) reduction 53
and monitoring of its forest
base and efficient firefighting mechanism
❖ Forest monitoring towers, communication network, fire brigades, video monitoring
❖ Fire awareness and environmental education awareness activities
❖ Community workers and stakeholders involvement
❖ Commitment to native forest conservation
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