How have forests changed? Results from FRA 2015

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How have forests changed? Results from FRA 2015 K. MacDicken, FAO Forestry

Transcript of How have forests changed? Results from FRA 2015

Page 1: How have forests changed? Results from FRA 2015

How have forests changed?Results from FRA 2015

K. MacDicken, FAO Forestry

Page 2: How have forests changed? Results from FRA 2015

286 national correspondents

6,000+ forest inventory

Resource partners

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The Collaborative Forest Resources Questionnaire:

Making Joint Data Collection Work

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How have forests changed?

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But first, how have we changed in the past 25 years?

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40%2.5x

37%

3.2%

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200 million m3

Annual wood removal

893

187

High income countries

Industrial Woodfuel

(million m3)

28

431

Low income countries

Industrial Woodfuel

(million m3)

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Net emissions

from forests

1.5 Gt CO2 per

year

CO2

129 million ha

Land conversion

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Natural forest

239 million ha

110 million ha

Planted forest

200 million ha

Protected area

150 million ha

Biodiversityconservation

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…and we changed the extent of global forest area

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Forest area loss has been cut in half

and is now less than one-tenth the rate

of human population growth1

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Percentage of land area

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… and in forest area per capita

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Lost or burned: which is more important?

Nearly 7 million ha of natural forest lost per year from 2010-2015.

An average of over 50 million ha of forest land burned every year.

compared to

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Forest area continues to expand in the temperate

and boreal zonesand contract in the tropics

2

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Forest area gains and losses

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Tropical forest loss

7.2 million ha per year

6.6 million ha per year

Agricultural expansion in the tropics

Tropics: 2000-2010

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The bulk of the world’s forest is natural forest.

But the share of planted forest is increasing.

Year Natural forest (%)

Planted forest (%)

1990 96 42005 94 62015 93 7

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Natural forest change (1990-2015)

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Natural forest change (2010-2015)

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Planted forest change (1990-2015)

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Planted forest change (2010-2015)

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Our capacity to manage forests for the long-term has never been

stronger.3

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More than half of all forest is permanent forest

Forest area0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%Not permanentPrivateState-owned

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UP

SFM supportive

policies and legislation

UPManagement

Planning

UPForest

monitoring through

inventories

UPForest

management certification

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More measurements, monitoring, and reporting

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Forest area certified as sustainably managed increased everywhere

More forest area is under management plans

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The Future

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What do countries think will happen to their forest area by 2030?

• Some countries expect it will decrease (27%)

• 21 countries expect a decrease of 65 million ha or 6% of their forest area

• Some think it will increase (73%)

• 52 countries expect a total increase of 144 million ha or 10% of their forest area

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Three important take-aways

1Forest area loss

has been cut in half and is now less than one-tenth the rate

of human population growth

2Forest area continues

to expand in the temperate and boreal

zones and contract in the tropics

3Our capacity

to manage forests for the long-term has never been

stronger.

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Explore these resources:–How are forests changing?–Special Issue of Forest Ecology

and Management–Desk Reference–Country Reports–Forest Land Use Data Explorer

www.fao.org/forestry/fra

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Forest resource information without investment and action is just interesting history…

Let us put this information to use for present and future generations…

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Thank you.

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Please see us at the FRA booth in the FAO Pavilion!

Don’t miss the session:Forest resources and how they are changing, TUESDAY 1245-1415h in Hall 5/6

www.fao.org/forestry/fra