Showing posts with label forestry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label forestry. Show all posts

Wednesday, 5 August 2009

EUROPEAN AND UNITED STATES FORESTRY SECTOR HIT HARD BY GLOBAL RECESSION – UN


The current economic crisis has pushed the European and the United States forestry sector into an even larger slump, according to a new United Nations study.

The 56-country UN Economic Commission for Europe (<"http://www.unece.org/press/pr2009/09tim_p04e.htm">UNECE), whose membership includes the United States and Canada, accounts for nearly half of global forests, and the region is also the largest global producer, consumer, exporter and importer of wood and paper products.

The new joint report by UNECE and the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (<"http://www.fao.org/">FAO) found that consumption, production and trade of forest products reached record highs in 2006, with a slight downturn registered in 2007.

That decline accelerated in 2008, marking the sharpest drop since the first oil shock of 1973, and continued into the first half of this year, it said.

But the study pointed to marked distinctions between the three UNECE subregions, with consumption marking 3 per cent growth in the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS).

However, with forest products markets primarily driven by housing construction requiring lumber, which tumbled dramatically in North America and Europe, consumption plummeted by nearly 13 per cent and almost 6 per cent, respectively.

From a peak of 2.2 million new homes in 2006, new constructions took a nose-dive, falling 25 per cent in 2007, 34 per cent in 2008 and an estimated 50 per cent this year. The UNECE/FAO study said that housing construction was down by 14 per cent last year and the same amount in 2009.

Although more houses continue to be built in the CIS, the pace has softened, the agencies said.

The fall in demand has pushed the real prices of building materials to their lows since the 1940s, while the paper sector is also falling deeper in to crisis, with production in Europe, North America and the CIS all reporting declines.

UNECE and FAO reported that some mills in the region have permanently ceased their operations, while forest owners and managers have cut back on their harvests, resulting in unemployment, as well as less income and tax revenues.

On the bright side, the new report noted that the wood energy sector seems to be immune to the current economic downturn, as demand for renewable energy sources, such as wood biomass, continues to steadily climb thanks to government policies towards climate change mitigation and energy security.


Friday, 27 February 2009

PLANTED FORESTS INCREASINGLY CRITICAL TO FUTURE WOOD SUPPLIES, SAYS UN AGENCY


PLANTED FORESTS INCREASINGLY CRITICAL TO FUTURE WOOD SUPPLIES, SAYS UN AGENCY
New York, Feb 27 2009 2:00PM
Planted forests – which provided wood that is renewable, energy efficient and environmentally friendly – have become increasingly critical to future supplies, according to a new study by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

The agency noted that in 2005, planted forests made up about 7 per cent of the global forest area – or 270 million hectares – compared to a total 4 billion hectares of forest covering 30 per cent of the world's land area.

But the importance of planted forests is expected to grow steadily with wood becoming an increasingly vital feedstock for industry, an increasingly competitive source of bio-energy due to the role of forests in mitigating the negative effects of climate change.

Planted forests help counter the negative affects of global warming by absorbing up to 1.5 gigatonnes of carbon every year, according to FAO's Jim Carle, Chief of the Forest Resources Development Service and co-author of the study published in the December 2008 issue of Forest Products Journal.

Planted forests can also indirectly help to reduce losses of natural forests, added the study, which surveyed 61 countries, which contain 95 per cent of all planted forests. They play an increasingly important social and environmental role in conservation, protection of soil and water, rehabilitation of degraded lands, combat against desertification and urban and rural landscaping.

Their role is even more important given that deforestation is occurring at an "alarming" rate of 13 million hectares per year, FAO stated, adding that wood-based industries are increasingly encouraged to adapt to "new wood" from planted forests.

The agency leads the development and implementation of voluntary guidelines for responsible management of planted forests, which, it says, provide a more environmentally-friendly raw material for construction compared to alternatives such as steel, aluminium, concrete and plastic.

FAO also announced that forests in a changing world will be the theme of World Forest Week taking place within the framework of the agency's Committee on Forestry which will be held in Rome from 16 to 20 March. FAO will also launch its report, State of the World's Forests 2009, on 16 March.
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