| The twentieth  session of the United Nations Food and  Agriculture Organization’s (FAO)  Committee on Forestry (COFO 2010)  convened from 4-8 October 2010 at FAO  headquarters in Rome. The meeting  attracted 770 participants from COFO member  states, including heads of  forestry departments, UN agencies, and  intergovernmental and  non-governmental organizations. In plenary sessions held  throughout the  week, participants discussed: the Global Forest Resources  Assessment  (FRA); forests, biodiversity and water in the context of climate   change; emerging opportunities and challenges in forest finance and  forest  governance; programme priorities for FAO in forestry;  communicating the role of  forests in sustainable development and  preparations for the International Year  of Forests 2011 (IYF); and  preparations for the XIV World Forestry Congress. COFO 2010 adopted  a  final report, in which it, inter alia: recommends that the next  FRA be prepared by 2015;  requests FAO to support national efforts on  strengthening financial support for  sustainable forest management  (SFM); requests FAO to assist countries in  valuing the potential  contribution of forests in climate change adaptation and  mitigation;  and requests FAO to more clearly identify areas of emphasis and  work on  areas where FAO has a comparative advantage. In parallel to  the  meeting and throughout the week, many special events were held as part  of  the second “World Forest Week.” These events included panel  discussions on, inter  alia: phytosanitary standards; new  developments in forest finance; linking  policy dialogue and  implementation; forest governance; reducing emissions from   deforestation and forest degradation, as well as the role of  conservation,  sustainable management of forests and enhancement of  forest carbon stocks  (REDD+); and Growing Forest Partnerships. COFO 2010 took  place  at a time when the world’s forests are receiving more attention than   ever. Many would say that this attention is long overdue, given that we  are  losing 13 million hectares of forest—about the size of Greece—on an  annual  basis. One of COFO 2010’s principal contributions was a call  for an  inter-sectoral approach to addressing problems facing forests,  and a “360  degree” perspective that takes into consideration the many  functions and  services that forests provide. A  BRIEF HISTORY OF COFO  COFO is the most   important of the FAO Forestry Statutory Bodies, which also include the  Regional  Forestry Commissions, the Advisory Committee on Paper and Wood  Products, the  Committee on Mediterranean Forestry Questions (Silva  Mediterranea), the  International Poplar Commission, and the Panel of  Experts on Forest Genetic  Resources. The biennial sessions of COFO,  held at FAO headquarters in Rome,  bring together heads of forestry  services and other senior government officials  to identify emerging  policy and technical issues, seek solutions and advise FAO  and others  on appropriate action. This is achieved through: periodic reviews of   international forestry problems and appraisal of these problems; review  of the  FAO forestry work programmes and their implementation; advice to  the FAO  Director-General on the future work programmes of FAO in the  field of forestry  and their implementation; reviews of and  recommendations on specific matters  relating to forestry referred to it  by the FAO Council, Director-General or  member states; and reports to  the FAO Council. Membership in COFO is open to  all FAO member states  wishing to participate in its work. COFO-14:  Discussions at COFO-14 session in 1999 addressed the work of the   Commission on Sustainable Development’s Intergovernmental Forum on  Forests, the  global forest sector outlook, and national and  international challenges to  forest policies for sustainability. COFO-14  also reviewed FAO’s programmes in  the forestry sector, and its  Strategic Framework (2000-2015) and medium-term  implications for the  forestry programme. COFO-15:  In 2001, COFO-15 focused on forest information and knowledge   management, criteria and indicators for sustainable development of all  types of  forests, and implications of certification and trade for SFM.  It reviewed FAO’s  forestry programmes, including results of the FRA  2000, the 2002-2007  Medium-Term Plan, proposals for a global FRA, and  key forest-related issues of  climate change and the Kyoto Protocol. COFO-16:  COFO-16 convened in March 2003 to discuss: forests and freshwater;   national forest programmes as a mechanism to implement the key outcomes  of the  World Food Summit and the World Summit on Sustainable  Development; the review  of FAO programmes; and the FAO medium-term  planning process, particularly  regarding forests, poverty and food  security, forest governance and forest  biodiversity. COFO-17:  COFO-17 convened in March 2005 to address: the 2005 State of the   World’s Forests report; RFCs; needs and opportunities for international   cooperation in forest fire preparedness; the role of forests in  contributing to  the Millennium Development Goals, and the World  Forestry Congress. The  Ministerial Meeting on Forests was also held  during COFO-17. Ministers  addressed issues relating to international  cooperation on forest fire  management and maintaining commitment to  SFM, and adopted a Ministerial  Statement. COFO-18:  COFO-18 convened in March 2007 to address: the 2007 State of the   World’s Forests report; forest and energy; forest protection; putting  forestry  to work at the local level; progressing towards SFM; shaping  an action  programme for FAO in forestry; decisions and recommendations  of FAO bodies; and  the XIII World Forestry Congress (WFC XIII). COFO-19: COFO-19  convened in March 2009 to discuss: the FAO Strategy for  Forests and  Forestry; the Collaborative Partnership on Forests’ Strategic  Framework  on Forests and Climate Change and related topics including SFM and   climate change; forest genetic resources; reducing emissions from  deforestation  and forest degradation; access to financing; the impacts  of recent economic  turbulence on the forest sector; and preparations  for WFC XIII. COFO19 adopted  a final report, in which it, inter  alia: urges members to deliberate  on national and international  responses of the forestry sector to climate  change; recommends that FAO  and other organizations strengthen members’  capacities to implement  SFM; and recommends that FAO prepare a report on the  State of the  World’s Forest Genetic Resources by 2013. REPORT  OF COFO 2010  On Monday, 4  October,  Eduardo Rojas-Briales, FAO Assistant Director-General and Head of   Forestry opened COFO 2010. Rojas-Briales suggested that forests are a   manageable sink and can make an essential contribution to offsetting  carbon  emissions. He added that reducing emissions from deforestation  and forest  degradation, as well as the role of conservation,  sustainable management of  forests, and enhancement of forest carbon  stocks (REDD+) is most welcome, but  to last it must integrate issues  such as biodiversity, rural development, and  land tenure, and ensure  that resources reach the ground. Noting that forest  policies and  management will only achieve their goals if based on a sound  scientific  basis, he supported the creation of an advisory panel on forest   knowledge. The plenary then   adopted the provisional agenda (COFO 2010/2) without amendment. The  following  COFO officers were nominated and elected by acclamation:  Anders Lönnblad  (Sweden) as Chair; Donatien N’Zala (Republic of Congo)  as First Vice-Chair; and  Karma Dukpa (Bhutan), Josué Morales  (Guatemala) Ahmed Ridha Fekih Salem  (Tunisia) and Jim Farrell (Canada)  as Co-Vice Chairs. In addition, delegates  elected members of the  Drafting Committee, with each region nominating three  countries to  serve on this committee. COFO  PLENARY  GLOBAL FOREST   RESOURCES ASSESSMENT: THE WAY FORWARD: On Monday,  Mette  Wilkie, FAO, presented the Global Forest Resource Assessment 2010 (FRA)  (COFO 2010/4), noting that it is the most comprehensive assessment of  its  kind, involving over 900 experts from 178 countries, at a cost of  US$25  million. She cautioned that the quality of data from many  countries remains  poor due to a lack of capacity, and noted challenges  in assessing forest  degradation. She suggested that key variables  should be made available on an  ongoing basis, instead of every five  years, and that remote sensing is playing  an increasingly important  role. In the ensuing   discussion, several countries made statements on the comprehensiveness  and  utility of FRA 2010. The European Union (EU) noted that although  good governance  is a prerequisite to sustainable forest management  (SFM), the concept is not  defined well enough to assess on a global  level. She cautioned that increasing  reporting frequency would be  costly, and urged a focus on increasing the  quality of existing  reporting. Canada called on FAO to focus on forests and not  trees  outside forests. Ethiopia suggested reevaluating current definitions of   the term “forest,” and Angola called for uniform definitions. The Republic of  Korea  recommended that FAO consider revising and clearly defining variables  and  adding new ones for the next assessment. Norway urged giving  priority to  information on rates of deforestation, carbon stocks, and  soils, and to  continue streamlining forest-related reporting. Morocco  noted that high costs  act as a barrier to using remote sensing but that  this can be overcome by  pooling efforts. Reflecting on the   interventions made by delegates, Rojas-Briales highlighted the need to   streamline reporting in regions where other processes exist, and to  integrate  remote sensing with traditional FRA methods. FOREST   BIODIVERSITY, FIRE AND WATER IN THE CONTEXT OF CLIMATE CHANGE: This  agenda item was addressed on Monday and Tuesday. Biodiversity  was  discussed in plenary on Monday; and fire and water were addressed in   parallel plenary sessions on Tuesday, which reported back to a joint  plenary  session on the same day. Forest   biodiversity: Oudara Souvannavong, FAO, presented a  report on  forest biodiversity in the context of climate change (COFO 2010/5.1),   highlighting the importance of forest biodiversity to the functioning of   forests and their ability to adapt to climate change. He noted the  impacts of  deforestation and forest degradation on forest biodiversity,  and noted that SFM  faces constraints in addressing this. He said that  although the global extent  of primary forests is declining, the amount  of protected areas is increasing. Tony Simmons,  World  Agroforestry Centre, facilitated the ensuing panel discussion, noting   that forests are fundamental to the habitability of our planet. Donatien N’Zala,   Director General of Forest Economy, Republic of Congo, described efforts   undertaken by his country to monitor biodiversity and encourage its  sustainable  use, noting that many threats remain. He said that 12 out  of 20 million  hectares of forest are designated for timber production,  and noted that  additional capacity is needed to ensure their  sustainable management. Expressing hope  for  large-scale restoration of forests and their biodiversity, Tim  Rollinson,  United Kingdom Forestry Commission, called for a holistic  approach to  sustainable management of forests that avoids separating  the issue into  biodiversity, climate change and forests. Sarath Fernando,   Conservator General of Forests, Sri Lanka, presented on his country’s   legislation and in situ and ex situ activities  protecting forest  and forest genetic resources. He highlighted ex  situ conservation  activities, noting limited human and financial  resources, and called for  increased education, training, and regional  cooperation. In the ensuing   discussion, the EU emphasized that the ecosystem approach is an  important part  of SFM, called on FAO to support national implementation  of international  agreements, and called for improving biodiversity  indicators in the FRA. Brazil welcomed  the  State of the World’s Forests Genetic Resources report, suggesting that  it  will be a technical rather than prescriptive document. She expressed   disappointment that it does not refer to access and benefit sharing.  Noting  that SFM and biodiversity protection are not fundamental  contradictions,  Switzerland supported strong cooperation of the UN  Forum on Forests (UNFF), FAO  and other forest organizations with the  Convention on Biological Diversity  (CBD). Japan said  protected  areas, good management of forests outside of protected areas, and   sustainable management of planted forests are all crucial for  biodiversity  conservation. Republic of Congo called for coordination  amongst  biodiversity-related conventions. Reflecting on  country  interventions, Souvannavong noted support for: FAO’s efforts to help   countries to protect biodiversity and gather information for national   strategies for mitigation, adaptation and forest management; and  improving the  quality of data gathered rather than increasing the  quantity of  indicators for biodiversity assessment. Forest Fire   and Health: Gillian Allard, FAO, presented a guide  on forest  practices to manage pests. José-Antonio Prado, FAO,  presented  the Secretariat’s note on forest fires (COFO 2010/5.2), and  suggested that COFO  may wish to encourage countries to, inter alia,  recognize the importance  of fire in REDD+ plans, and request FAO to  update fire management guidelines in  light of REDD+. Jim Carle, FAO,  presented a new approach to address mega-fires,  including increasing  mitigation efforts through active land management such as  fuel  reduction and prescribed burning in high risk areas. Panelists  addressed  fire management strategies in their respective countries. Tom  Tidwell,  US Forest Service, said the US’s strategy aims to restore ecosystems   and forest resiliency on a landscape scale and build fire-adapted human   communities. João Rocha Pinho, National Director for Forest Management,   Portugal, described the challenges of strategic fuel management in  current social  and agricultural systems, given Portugal’s mostly  smallholder land ownership  system. Felician Kilhama, Ministry of  Forestry and Beekeeping, Tanzania,  highlighted villager involvement in  reducing fire incidence in participatory  forest management areas. Andrey Eritsov,   Aerial Forest Fire Center, Russia, said that increased fire frequency is  linked  to climate change and regional drought, and highlighted new  transboundary fire  prevention efforts. Neil Cooper, Fire Manager,  Australia Capital Territory,  said that recent catastrophic fires  exposed the insufficiency of Australia’s  fire management capacity and  prompted reforms, including prescribed burning of  at least 5% of the  country’s forests per annum. In the  ensuing  discussion, the EU urged a proactive approach to forest health, and to   seek synergies with existing efforts such as the International Strategy  for  Disaster Reduction and the Global Fire Monitoring Centre. Indonesia  suggested  engaging sectors other than forestry as well as forest  dwellers to address the  root causes of forest fires. Iran queried  whether forest fires originating in  protected areas should be allowed  to burn as part of the forest’s natural  cycle. Japan highlighted  efforts to reduce emissions from slash and burn  agriculture. China  emphasized that the impact of invasive species is three  times that of  fire, and described national achievements in SFM promotion, pest   control and emergency responsiveness. Ethiopia noted that impacts of  fire on  wildlife have not been considered, and that traditional  knowledge should inform  fire management strategies. France suggested  that discussion of forest health  needs to be further linked to climate  change. Malaysia called on FAO for  guidance on how REDD will intersect  with fire management programmes. Nicaragua  highlighted the restoration  of rights over ancestral land, noting that  traditional forestry  practices can contribute to SFM. Forests and  Water: Moujahed Achouri,  FAO, presented the relevant document  (COFO 2010/5.3). Karma Dukpa, Department  of Forest and Park Services,  Bhutan, described a compensatory payment system in  which the hydropower  sector supports efforts to combat deforestation. MoshibudiRampedi,  Department of Water Affairs and Forestry, South Africa, reported  on  efforts to link water and forest issues in light of water scarcity,   including: linking afforestation projects to the purchase of a water  license;  and agreement with the private sector on the maximum level of  afforestation.  İsmail Belen, Ministry of Environment and Forestry,  Turkey, noted the lack of  clear responsibilities of water and forest  departments within his ministry,  resulting in problems with managing  water catchment areas in forests. Rolf  Manser, Federal Department of  the Environment, Switzerland, noted threats to  water supply from forest  catchment areas, such as atmospheric nitrogen  deposition. He said  forest management practices can help maintain water  quality, but forest  organizations need support through cross-sectoral  partnerships and  payments for forest ecosystem services. Wladimir Tene,  National Forest  Director, Ecuador, described a national plan for the expansion  of  forest areas and the protection of catchment areas in cooperation with  the  water sector. In the ensuing   discussion, participants addressed, inter alia: the role of  arid and  semi-arid areas in the context of forest and water management;  the difference  in water needs for reforestation and afforestation;  FAO’s water platform;  protection of water catchment areas in highly  populated regions; integrated  water management; training programmes for  water and forest organizations to  identify common ground;  transboundary water management; and landscape  restoration for  protecting water resources. Summarizing the   panel, Eva Müller, FAO, highlighted the trans-boundary and social and  economic  dimensions of the forest and water issue, and the need for FAO  to take into  account the very different country settings. EMERGING   OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES IN FOREST FINANCE AND FOREST GOVERNANCE:  This agenda item was addressed on Wednesday in parallel and plenary   sessions, including panel presentations and discussion. Strengthening   public sector finance for SFM: Adrian Whiteman,  FAO,  introduced the topic (COFO 2010/6.1) by describing barriers to raising   public finance for SFM, and ways to overcome them. Juan Manuel  Torres-Rojo,  Director, National Forest Commission, Mexico, emphasized  matching funds as a  means of scaling up forest finance, and described  specialized financial  mechanisms, including: insurance products;  mortgages for standing trees;  contracts on future harvests; and  creation of local markets and voluntary  carbon markets. Luis Torales  Kennedy, Paraguay Forest Institute, noted that his  country replaced  less successful indirect incentive mechanisms with direct  subsidies,  that, inter alia: reimburse 75% of the costs of forest   plantations and the first three years of maintenance of these forests;  and  provide credits that are appropriate for forest projects. José Antonio González  Martin, Ministry of  the Environment, Spain, said it is important to  both strengthen finance for  public-owned forests and provide financial  incentives to private owners and  communities. He emphasized: financing  mechanisms for sustainable agriculture  and for owners of small forests;  grouping of forest projects; and common  marketing of products from  certified forests. Kiyeon Ko, Korea Forest Service,  described  success  stories in stopping  deforestation in his country: village forestry  associations that receive  financial support from the government to  establish and protect pine forests,  and a green fund that receives  funding from lottery proceeds and finances  projects such as walking  trails, green culture and education programmes, and  bioenergy projects. In the ensuing   discussion, delegates addressed, inter alia: that forests  provide  multiple benefits and must be financed by many sectors; the  need for making  activities and results visible to raise awareness and  funding for forestry  sectors; donor agencies’ focus on big programmes,  resulting in forest projects  receiving less funding; and the  difficulties in matching donor rationalities  with local needs.  Delegates also asked for FAO’s assistance in developing  forest finance  mechanisms. Nicaragua said  that  due to donors failing to meet their official development assistance  (ODA)  commitments, the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) will not be  met. Paraguay  commented on the difficulty of accessing existing funds. The EU and Japan   called for the creation of enabling conditions to encourage private  sector  investment, with the EU adding that the value of environmental  services needs  to be properly assessed to be incorporated into decision  making. China  suggested the creation of separate finance mechanisms  tailored to address  different functions of forests, including  ecological and cultural. New Zealand  said that  public funding can serve as a catalyst for private investment, and   suggested that FAO work with the Collaborative Partnership on Forests  (CPF) to  refine finance mechanisms. The US called on FAO to support the  UNFF  Facilitative Process on forest financing. Brazil supported the  creation of a  global forest fund. Forest   governance: Eva Müller, FAO, presented the  associated  background paper (COFO/6.2), stating that insecure tenure and   discretionary authority create an uncertain investment climate. She said  that  countries could benefit from an analytical framework to assess  governance  strengths and weaknesses. She suggested that COFO consider  adopting decisions  on including governance in future FRAs, and on  extending support to countries  in strengthening forest governance.  Nalin  Kishor, World  Bank, said that corruption spreads between sectors, and leads to  an  overall loss of governmental credibility. He highlighted work conducted  by  the Environmental Investigation Agency that demonstrated the high  costs of  illegal logging. He applauded demand-side efforts to ban  imports of illegal  wood, but cautioned that leakage to indiscriminate  markets threatens to  undermine such efforts. He said that a number of  institutions are developing  forest governance indicators, avoiding  overlap by sharing experiences at a  recent symposium.  Paul Munro-Faure,   FAO, presented FAO’s voluntary guidelines on forest tenure, noting the   interdisciplinary nature of the issue, and highlighted risks associated  with  insecure tenure, including marginalization of the poor and  unsustainable land  use. He stressed the voluntary nature of the  guidelines, intended as an  international framework for evaluation, and  said implementation will commence  in 2012. The EU  noted that  many different international institutions are addressing forest   governance, and said it was premature to include this in the FRA. Brazil   stressed that devising universal standards to monitor governance  mechanisms in  the FRA is inappropriate. She noted that controlling  illegal logging was a  domestic issue and, with China, called for  international cooperation to control  illegal trade. The US, Canada  and  Japan suggested that FAO build on national experiences and regional   criteria and indicator processes to develop governance indicators. New  Zealand  said efforts to assess governance should build on existing  efforts such as the  efforts of national forest programmes (NFPs) to  improve governance. He stressed  the importance of demand-side policies  by importing countries in restricting  trade in unsustainably produced  forest products. Indonesia said   fighting illegal logging and trade will take international political   commitment. Japan said forest governance should be tackled in  coordination with  other stakeholders involved in climate change-related  capacity building. The  Community of Central African States and  Tanzania called for support for  capacity building and strengthening of  public sector institutions at the country  level. Rojas-Briales   suggested a broad approach to forest governance, noting that illegal  logging  was a relatively minor driver of deforestation. REDD+: Jose  Antonio Prado, FAO, outlined ways in which FAO can support  national  REDD+ efforts (COFO 2010/6.3), including: integration of forests into   climate strategies and policies; information exchange; capacity building  for  monitoring, reporting and verification; assistance with forest  inventory and  databases; and participation in the UN-REDD Programme to  support countries in  preparing their REDD+ strategies. He noted that  many of FAO’s existing best  practices guidelines can assist countries  in meeting their REDD+ goals. Morocco requested   that REDD+ assistance include all types of forests, including arid and  semi-arid  areas. Afghanistan emphasized that a successful REDD+  mechanism will depend on  good governance, equity, fairness and  stakeholder involvement, and encouraged  the integration of REDD+ into  the agendas of all FAO regional bodies. Brazil  cautioned  against prejudging outcomes of the discussions of the UN Framework   Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). The US  emphasized  that REDD must include robust monitoring and strong social and   environmental safeguards. The US and Norway suggested FAO can play an  important  role in climate change activities by building on existing  efforts, with Norway  highlighting the FRA and capacity building, and  the US emphasizing: integration  of REDD into NFPs; strengthening  governance and tenure; financing strategies,  including payments for  ecosystem services (PES); and monitoring and assessment,  including a  global remote sensing survey.  Japan said  that the  Copenhagen Accord provides a basis for action on REDD+. Republic of   Congo called for FAO to support REDD+ as an instrument to restore  degraded  forests and ensure sustainable development of forest resources  in the fight  against poverty. The EU said the  document should give more  attention to sustainable land use, linking  the improvement of land-use  governance for agriculture and forests. She  urged involving local communities  in REDD+. Malaysia said FAO  plays a significant role  in developing and understanding issues related  to climate change and REDD+.  Costa Rica suggested that FAO should give  technical support for capacity  building in accessing funds. Switzerland  called  for enhanced regional cooperation and information sharing on forestry   and adaptation, and advocated to link the climate change platforms  envisaged  under the UNFCCC to FAO’s regional commissions. He said a  synthesizing  organization that provides network and support services is  needed, and  supported periodical meetings on technical issues of  interregional interests. DECISIONS AND   RECOMMENDATIONS OF FAO BODIES OF INTEREST TO THE COMMITTEE: This  agenda item was addressed in plenary on Wednesday. Michael  Martin,  FAO, introduced the relevant document (COFO 2010/7), highlighting   proposals to: examine COFO’s rules of procedure that would, inter  alia,  enhance the role of COFO chairs; and develop a multi-year  programme of work for  2012-2015. Several countries   supported the recommendations contained in the document, highlighting  support  for an analysis of forest genetic resources, and for regional  policy exchanges.  The EU and the US called for closer cooperation with  the FAO Committee on  Agriculture, with the US adding that this should  go beyond agroforestry to  include issues such as governance, land  tenure and market access. PROGRAMME   PRIORITIES FOR FAO IN FORESTRY: Rojas-Briales  introduced this  item (COFO 2010/8) in plenary on Wednesday. Noting priorities  were  based on recommendations from the regional forestry commissions, he  highlighted  the following: broadening national forest monitoring and  assessment to cover  rangelands, non-wood forest products (NWFPs) and  environmental services;  climate change adaptation activities; capacity  building in forestry education;  activities in social and community  forest management; communication  opportunities during the International  Year of Forests; scaling up exemplary  cases of SFM; capacity building  in forest health and forest genetic resources;  and strengthening  alliances. Iran called for   attention to phytosanitary measures. Stressing that REDD+ is a  coordinated  activity among UN agencies, he lamented that FAO has not  clarified its own role  and comparative advantages, and suggested that  FAO’s strength lies in  statistics, forest monitoring and assessment,  and technical support. The EU  called on FAO to prioritize climate  change-related activities, particularly the  use of SFM for mitigation  and adaptation. She: called for giving priority to  enhancing the  quality of data in the FRA rather than the quantity of criteria   assessed; welcomed the strategic objective of sustainable management of  land,  water and genetic resources; and asked how priority setting will  be reflected  in the next FAO budget. The US called for building  capacity for NFPs, in particular  on national financing strategies.  Welcoming climate change as a priority area,  she urged that FAO  concentrate on its comparative advantages, suggesting:  cross-sectoral  integration of climate change issues into forestry; national  forest  strategies; and global remote sensing. Australia supported FAO’s   priority setting for the medium term, saying the objectives are  ambitious but  achievable, and urged FAO and member countries to think  strategically. Canada suggested, inter  alia: in  cooperation with CPF partners, to focus on increasing  the effectiveness of  existing SFM funding sources as well as on  increasing the funding; to maximize  the SFM benefits of emerging  sources of finance such as REDD; and, on forest  governance, to broaden  the emphasis on community forestry to include other  participatory  approaches to forest management. Tanzania, supporting  the proposed priority  areas, noted that priority setting must be  evaluated against the background of  FAO’s strategic framework. COMMUNICATING   THE ROLE OF FORESTS IN SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT—THE INTERNATIONAL YEAR  OF  FORESTS (2011): This session was held on Thursday.   Moderator Annika Söder, FAO, said forests have moved to the center of  attention  as they play an important role in achieving the MDGs as well  as the Rio+20  process. Rojas-Briales presented on communicating the  role of forests in  sustainable development (COFO 2010/9), noting a lack  of awareness outside the  forest sector of the contribution of forests  to sustainable development. He  emphasized that NWFPs provide a safety  net during tough economic times. He  suggested that each month of the  International Year of Forests highlight a  different value that forests  deliver. Emphasizing the   linkages between his country’s NFP and poverty reduction strategies,  Abdelazim  Mirghani Ibrahim, Head of Forestry, Sudan, noted that Sudan’s  National Forest  Corporation links the trade of wood products with  poverty reduction,  highlighting community participation in planting and  protecting trees, but  lamented that shrinking revenues and lack of  donor and government funding  constrain the extension of these  activities. Gilbert Canet  Brenes,  Director, National System of Conservation Areas, Costa Rica, described   efforts that helped restore his country’s forest cover from 21 to 51%,  including:  protected areas that account for 30% of the country’s  territory; education and  community forest programmes; PES to finance  the production of hydrocarbons; 30  biological corridors managed with  the participation of local councils;  ecotourism accounting for 50% of  the tourism sector; and hydro-energy that  delivers 90% of national  electricity consumption. Addressing the  need  for better communicating the role and work of forestry sectors, Gerhard   Mannsberger, Head of Forestry Department, Austria, lamented that  despite  significant expansion of forests in Europe, the vast majority  of Europeans  believe harvesting is a major threat to forests. He  described a national  cooperation programme linking more than 30  organizations from the forest and  wood-based sector. Emphasizing that  the  framework for forest work has changed dramatically due to factors such  as  climate change and population pressure, Gerhard Dieterle, World  Bank, urged for  increased interaction with other sectors to tackle  deforestation. He explained that  the World Bank’s forest-related  investments are more successful when linked to  water, energy, or  agricultural issues, and presented Forest Carbon Partnership  Facility  (FCPF) and Forest Investment Program (FIP) projects that reflect such   cross-sectoral thinking.  Jan McAlpine,  UNFF,  presented a movie by John Liu showing the potential of forest  restoration  to improve the lives of rural people. She emphasized the  need for forest  financing, and engagement with actors outside the  forest sector. In the discussion,   Afghanistan said that individual projects, while useful, do not fulfill  the  need for a national forest strategy. Senegal lamented the lack of  trained  foresters and funds to recruit them. Republic of Korea   said that development strategies have not given forests enough  attention, and  suggested that the FRA be adapted to evaluate the dollar  value of services  provided by forests, so their importance could be  properly communicated to  other ministries. He noted that his country  will host the tenth meeting of the  Conference of the Parties (COP 10)  to the UN Convention to Combat  Desertification (UNCCD), and that this  could provide an opportunity to showcase  forests’ role in preventing  desertification. China announced  that  in 2011, China will expand its afforestation campaign, and will hold an   award ceremony on 12 March 2011. Republic of Congo said that the forest  sector  in his country has played a role in improving access to remote  forested regions  due to construction of roads, communications  infrastructure, and landing  strips. He noted Congo’s ambition to  establish one million hectares of  plantations. The EU suggested that  the role of forests in achieving the MDGs  should be highlighted during  the IYF, noted the success of the European Forest  Communicators  Network, and suggested that the message of what forests have to  offer  needs to be tailored to the regional and local level to be effective. Senegal brought   attention to a project on knowledge transfer of sustainable practices to  local  communities. Uganda asked for sharing of information on how to  restore forests  removed by small-scale farmers to enhance their food  security. Norway outlined   cooperation on policies among European countries through Forests Europe.  He  highlighted the upcoming Ministerial Conference on the Protection  of Forests in  Europe, saying that countries will likely commit to a  common vision of European  forests, and decide whether to launch  negotiations on a legally-binding  agreement on forests in Europe. Brazil said that  the  IYF should focus on how forests make a difference in the lives of people   living in and around forests. Lamenting that  the  preoccupation with climate change and other issues has distracted  attention  from the role of forests in sustainable development,  Indonesia expressed hope  that the IYF can restore attention to a  broader view of forests. The US welcomed  FAO’s  emphasis on working with other sectors and organizations, and urged not   to reduce forests to one benefit or service. Highlighting  comments  on cross-sectoral issues and land  planning, Rojas-Briales urged FAO to  strengthen its capacity in these  areas, and said FAO will take the  challenge of transforming FRA to have a  broader view on forests. CONCLUSIONS OF   THE XIII WORLD FORESTRY CONGRESS (WFC) PREPARATIONS FOR THE WFC XIV  (2015): On Friday, Leopoldo Montes, Secretary-General, WFC  XIII, and  Tomás Schlichter, Chair of the Technical and Academic  Committee of WFC XIII,  presented the conclusions of WFC XIII (COFO  2010/10), highlighting that most  observations and recommendations from  the nine key areas addressed by the WFC  contain a strong environmental  component. Delegates then heard  bids from India and  South Africa to host WFC XIV in 2015. Delegates  commended the governments of  both countries for the high quality of  their applications. Several African  countries, as well as Switzerland,  supported South Africa’s bid, noting that  the WFC has never been held  in Africa, and recognizing the potential the first  congress on the  continent could have. Peter Csoka, FAO, said that the submissions  of  the two countries, as well as the recommendations heard in plenary, will  be  presented to the FAO Council for a final decision.  DATE AND PLACE  OF THE NEXT SESSION OF COFO: On Friday, Csoka  recommended,  and delegates agreed, that the next session of COFO will be held  in  October 2012, in Rome, Italy. WORLD  FOREST WEEK  Throughout the  week,  parallel events and events in support of COFO 2010 were held as part of   World Forest Week (WFW). These events were intended to create a more  informal  dialogue, with delegates speaking in their personal capacity  and not as state  representatives, and open to participation by  intergovernmental and  non-governmental organizations. These events were  not officially included in  the report of COFO 2010. All WFW events  held in support of COFO are summarized  here. He Changchui,  FAO,  opened WFW on Monday. He said SFM is a practical tool for achieving   sustainable development, and called for stronger partnership with the  private  sector, as well as sound governance as a precondition for  achieving greater  benefits. Lamenting that the total number of hungry  people remains unacceptably  high, he encouraged delegates to sign FAO’s  “One Billion Hungry” campaign. Ahmed Djoghlaf,  CBD  Executive Secretary, through a video message, emphasized the importance  of  biodiversity in climate change mitigation, and noted the CBD’s new  strategic  plan to restore 50% of degraded forests by 2020. He lamented  that less than 10%  of the world’s forests are managed sustainably, and  that a high degree of  variation remains in interpreting what  constitutes SFM. Teresa Presas,   President, International Council of Forest and Paper Associations,  addressed  challenges facing the forest sector, including the economic  downturn, access to  fiber and competition from wood substitutes. She  highlighted land pressures  stemming from increased demand for food and  bioenergy, and called for the use  of lesser-used tree products. Niels Elers Koch,   President, International Union of Forest Research Organizations (IUFRO),   highlighted IUFRO’s contributions to bridging the science-policy gap,   including: the Global Forest Expert Panel, which produces comprehensive   peer-reviewed scientific assessments and policy briefs on forest  adaptation to  climate change, and on the international forest regime;  capacity building in  science-policy interfacing; and the IUFRO  2010-2014 Strategy’s emphasis on this  interface. BIODIVERSITY   AND PHYTOSANITARY STANDARDS: This event took place  on Monday,  and was chaired by Peter Kenmore, FAO. Tim Christophersen, CBD,   presented on the biodiversity benefits of REDD+, noting that there is a  strong  correlation between biodiversity and forest carbon stocks. He  said that there  was more carbon in primary and naturally regenerated  forests than in  plantations, and highlighted carbon and biodiversity  mapping tools. Jean Claude   Nguinguiri, FAO, discussed a study surveying measures to protect  biodiversity  in forest concessions in Central Africa, saying that  results were mixed:  progress had been made on awareness-raising among  forest companies and  incorporation into national legislation, but  effective implementation of  measures has been limited. He highlighted  barriers to implementation, including  insufficient human and financial  resources and technical problems. Jarkko Koskela,  Bioversity International,  introduced the European Information System on  Forest Genetic Resources  (EUFGIS), which: created a network of 35  national focal points; established  pan-European minimum requirements to  clarify the role of protected areas and  production forests in gene  conservation; and defined standards for gene  conservation units.  Koskela noted that EUFGIS offers data on more than 2200  gene  conservation units and 110 tree species in 35 countries, and suggested   that the information system can contribute to the discovery of genes  with  adaptive significance. Presenting a study on  the implementation of  phytosanitary standards in forestry, Kerry  Britton, US Department of  Agriculture, explained that the main reason  for the rising number of forest  pests is increasing trade in wood  products, with major forest pest pathways  being: wood packaging  materials; wood products including handicraft and  firewood; and nursery  stocks. She suggested that ways to prevent pests include  good forest  management, investing in science to identify threats, monitoring of   expatriate plants, and regulating commodity and package material. She  noted  that the International Plant Protection Convention developed  international  standards for phytosanitary measures, but that  governments have to find ways to  implement the standards and the forest  industry needs help in implementing  them. In the ensuing   discussion, participants addressed, inter alia: the need for  differentiating  between the potential of different forest types for  adaptation and mitigation;  experience with biodiversity conservation in  forests controlled  by private entities; and coherence between  phytosanitary standards and  forest certification schemes. FRA 2010: On  Monday, Mette Wilkie, FAO, presented key findings from the FRA  2010,  noting that five countries account for more than half of the world’s  four  billion hectares of forest. She noted that primary forests are  declining by  four million hectares per year, while plantations are  expanding by five million  hectares per year, largely in China. She  noted that it is difficult to  depict global trends in forest  management, noting that certain regions  exhibit alarming trends. Joberto Freitas,   Brazilian Forest Service, noted that deforestation in Brazil has been  declining  since 2004 due to a variety of measures, including: expansion  of protected  areas; a strategic plan to prevent and control  deforestation; enhanced law  enforcement; and investment in forest  monitoring systems. He highlighted the  importance of detecting  selective logging, which is a precursor to  deforestation. Zhang Min, State   Forestry Administration, China, described China’s massive reforestation   efforts, amounting to almost five million hectares per year, involving  11.5  million people. He said that this has increased China’s forest  cover from 14 to  20% between 1990 and 2010, and that the government  aims to achieve 26% cover by  2050. He noted the ecological and social  benefits that this has delivered. Jim Farrell,  Canadian  Forest Service, presented on forest health, noting that although most   insect “pests” are a natural part of forest function, current outbreaks  in  Canada are high above normal cyclical levels, likely due to  conditions created  by fire suppression over time. Rémy Mukongo   Shabantu, Economic Community of Central African States, described  developments  in Central African forest management, noting that between  2000 and 2010 the  region lost an average of 660,000 hectares of forest,  but designated 147,000  hectares per year as conservation areas. He  noted that all governments now  have policies supporting SFM, and most  have timber auction systems designed to  increase allocation  transparency. He noted that although all countries are  engaged with the  EU’s forest law enforcement, governance and trade Voluntary   Partnership Agreement process, progress has been uneven. He noted the   importance of independent forest monitoring in ensuring transparency,  and  challenges such as weak institutions. Adrian Whiteman,  FAO,  presented results from an inquiry on public expenditure and revenue   collection, new to the FRA for 2010. He highlighted that in 2005 global  revenue  from forestry was US$14.6 billion, while public expenditure on  forestry was  US$19 billion. He noted that Africa averaged less than a  dollar per hectare in  revenue, compared to the global average of six  dollars.   NEW   DEVELOPMENTS IN FOREST FINANCE: Michael Martin,  FAO, chaired  this session on Tuesday. Ulrich Apel, Global Environment Facility   (GEF), said that US$750 million of the US$4 billion of GEF’s fifth   replenishment period are allocated to SFM/REDD+ activities, with an  additional  US$250 million going to an SFM/REDD+ incentive mechanism.  Uganda commented that  these vast sums of money have not yet reached the  ground. Yemi Katerere,   UN-REDD Programme, said the Programme received pledges of US$112  million, and  that eight out of nine pilot countries are ready for  implementation. He noted  lessons learned, including: formulation of  roadmaps as a means of clarifying  needs and ways forward; and readiness  plans that should be cross-sectoral and  integrated with national  development plans. Gerhard Dieterle,   World Bank, provided an overview of the activities of the FCPF and FIP,   highlighting FIP’s planning of investments in: institutional capacity  in forest  governance and information; and investments in other sectors  that affect  forests. He noted stakeholders’ concerns with the potential  of REDD to  recentralize forest governance. Christian  Mersmann,  Global Mechanism (GM) of the UNCCD, highlighted the GM’s role as a   facilitator of forest financing, working towards an integrated  investment  framework that links sectors nationally. He noted that  forest financing was  still too dependent on international finance. Jan McAlpine,   Director, UNFF, said the UNFF financing strategy takes a cross-sectoral   approach. She highlighted the conclusions of the recent meeting of the Ad   Hoc Expert Group on Forest Financing, including the request to  the UNFF  Secretariat to study the implications of REDD+ financing on  broader forest  financing. Peter Besseau,   International Model Forest Network (IMFN), stressed the value of people  as an  integral asset in sustainability. Recounting the IMFN’s  experience to date, he  noted that a lot can be done with relatively  modest, well-targeted funding. LINKING POLICY   DIALOGUE AND IMPLEMENTATION: Jim Carle, FAO,  chaired this  session on Tuesday. David Kpelle, FAO/Forestry Commission, Ghana,   reported on implementation of the Non-Legally Binding Instrument on All  Types  of Forests (NLBI) with the support of the German Society for  Technical  Cooperation (GTZ), noting the importance of its national  action framework in  coordinating Ghana’s many programmes related to  forests. He identified existing  strengths, including stakeholder  consultations and areas for improvement, such  as enhancing  cross-sectoral coordination and providing a watchdog role for  civil  society. Liu Daoping,  State  Forestry Administration, China, presented on planted forest management  in  China, noting the establishment of guidelines on responsible  management of  plantations and on silvicultural practices by Chinese  companies overseas. Felician  Kilahama,  Director of Forests and Beekeeping, Tanzania, said that Tanzania’s   forest inventory, financed by Finland, had been broadened to consider  emerging  issues such as REDD, biodiversity, soil carbon, and trees  outside of forests.  He emphasized the importance of monitoring forest  governance in order to  understand how decisions affect people and  forests, and said that the inventory  had been influential in improving  policies and strategic planning. Delegates  discussed, inter  alia: how frequently forest policies should be  re-assessed; costs  associated with forest inventories; challenges with  monitoring change  over time; benefits of adopting voluntary guidelines, and the  need for  more widespread implementation of the NLBI prior to the 2015 review of   its effectiveness. COMMUNICATING   THE POTENTIAL OF FORESTRY TO THE FINANCE SECTOR: On  Tuesday,  Chair Jerker Thunberg, FAO, noted the need for enhanced communication   between the forest and finance sectors to bridge the financing gap in  forestry.  Emmanuel Ferreira, economic advisor to the Government of  Paraguay, said  improving this communication requires a process of  translation of terminologies  between forest and finance departments.  Reinhold Glauner, Managing Director,  WaKa Forest Investment Services,  said the challenge for the forest sector is to  create reasonable  financial returns of about 10% to attract the billions of  dollars  available from private and institutional investors. Dominic Elson,   advisor to the Government of Indonesia, said establishing rights can  improve  the institutional conditions for attracting the desired type of  investments,  but noted that investors can find community rights  difficult to understand.  Josué Morales, Head of the National Forest  Institute, Guatemala, shared  experiences with a forest investment  programme that, inter alia,  aims to involve small  wood producers, emphasizing the role of micro-finance  institutions.  Hans Thiel, FAO Investment Centre, lamented that forest  departments  often do not participate in negotiations with international  financial  institutions, and therefore do not partake in public sector loans. He   called for articulating forestry policy with broader sectoral policies  and  national development plans. Responding to   questions, Thiel said private investment does not need to be triggered  by  public money, but requires clear rules and expectations. Elson  called for  distinguishing between soft public money that can help  create institutional  contexts, and hard private investment that seeks  returns. Ferreira noted a gap  between finance for small projects and  large investments of more than US$10  million, and recommended pooling  projects at the community level to attract  investment. PANEL OF   SCIENTISTS AND HEADS OF FORESTRY ON GOVERNANCE: Ewald   Rametsteiner, FAO, chaired this session on Tuesday. Dilip Kumar,  Director,  Indian Forest Service, noted that since decolonization India  has delineated  forest management according to village, production and  protection forests. He  noted the need to move away from a technical to a  more social approach to  forestry, particularly since forested areas  are associated with high levels of  poverty, and to consider the impacts  of other sectors. Karl Reinhard  Volz,  Freiburg University, highlighted that science’s role is to independently   evaluate and present options and possible consequences, leaving it to   politicians to select from among these. He cautioned against the   “scientification” of politics that ignores the social construction of  truth. Margaret Shannon,   European Forest Institute, suggested that forest policy making is not a   “puzzle” that can be solved with additional information, but a  “mystery” that  requires good judgment in order to make sense of an  abundance of data. She  recommended a post-normal approach to science  that considers legitimacy of  authority and the context of a problem as  well as the problem itself. Marilyn Headly,   Forestry Department, Jamaica, described a national case where scientific   information provided by the forestry department was used to inform and  adapt  policy on land reclamation, requiring mining companies to  restore forests in a  two-phased approach that involves planting of  leguminous plants prior to  planting hardwood species. Ahmed Ridha Fekih   Salem, Director, Department of Forests, Tunisia, described the Tunisian   experience with collaboration between decision-makers and policy  implementers,  stressing the strong and diversified involvement of  scientific partners. Julius Chupezi   Tieguhong, FAO, described collaboration between scientists and policy  makers in  identifying gaps in forest legislation with respect to NWFPs  in Cameroon, and  on governance transparency in the NWFP sector. He  lamented that funding had  been terminated before the project was  completed. Delegates  discussed:  why forest scientists had yet to receive a Nobel Prize; how some   governments have ignored scientific recommendations; and the need to  involve  more social scientists in forestry departments. PANEL OF   SCIENTISTS AND HEADS OF FORESTRY ON REDD+: This  panel was  moderated by Eva Müller, FAO, on Wednesday. Samuel Afari Dartey,   Forestry Commission of Ghana, emphasized the importance of civil society   participation and the inclusion of proactive conflict resolution  mechanisms in  REDD. Francesco  Carbone,  University of Tuscia, described how forests have failed to benefit   under the Clean Development Mechanism, and lessons that this offers for  REDD,  noting that plantations offer very little benefit for local  people and cause  social tension. Marlo Mendoza, Forest Management  Bureau, the Philippines, said  that since the 1970s the Philippines’  forest cover has dropped from 17 to 7.2  million hectares, and said REDD  will be most difficult to implement where  poverty is the driver of  deforestation.  Alain  Karsenty,  Agricultural Research for Development (CIRAD), argued that if REDD is   to work it will necessarily create winners and losers, and that if all   countries “win,” chances are that it is the climate that is losing. He  noted  several fundamental problems underlying REDD that remain  unresolved, including  the impermanence of forests and methods of  remuneration, and lamented that the  mechanism remains incapable of  addressing “leakage.” He said that REDD is based  on an overly  simplistic theory of motivation, in that it assumes that each  state  will react in the same way to the same incentives, and fails to consider   the dynamics of the fragile and sometimes failing states in which it  will  operate. Karsenty added that as a “cap-and-trade” mechanism, thus  far REDD has  generated a lot of “trade” but no real “cap,” as there is  no limit to credits  generated. He cautioned that REDD currently lacks  the rigor and regulation  underlying the Kyoto Protocol. He said that an  agreement on REDD is unlikely to  be achieved in Cancun, and suggested  that an alternative would be to create an  international fund to combat  deforestation, focused on addressing underlying  drivers and tailored to  country situations.  Boen  Purnama,  Ministry of Forestry, Indonesia, said that Indonesia’s complex tenure   system poses challenges to REDD implementation, and that financing needs  to be  simple and adjusted to local requirements. Elena Petkova, Centre   for International Forestry Research, said it is not a question of “how  can we  make REDD more effective” but whether it can be effective at  all, given the  flaws in its current design. She said the true test of  REDD is whether it will  be able to re-shape development paths towards  sustainability, or be shaped  itself by the vested interests that are  resisting change. She highlighted how  focusing on measuring emissions  dictates a costly techno-centric approach that  can lead to outside  “expert control” of REDD activities, taking control away  from local  communities.  She cautioned that  REDD may recentralize  governance, and said that transparency and civil  society oversight will be key  to ensuring legitimacy. She emphasized  that the single biggest obstacle is the  contradictory incentives  driving the development of non-forest sectors such as  palm oil. OPPORTUNITIES   FOR THE INTERNATIONAL YEAR OF FORESTS 2011: This  event was  chaired by Peter Csoka, FAO. Outlining planned activities for the   International Year of Forests (IYF), Jan McAlpine, Director, UNFF, said   “Forests 2011” should be a celebration of the positive things related  to  forests and their role for people, highlighting biodiversity,  climate and  health. She explained that the UNFF, as the focal point for  the UN system, will  be working closely with the Secretariats of the  Rio conventions, the CPF, and  major groups, as well as artists and  filmmakers. She said UNFF will pursue a  variety of activities,  highlighting a “forest heroes” programme, the International  Forest Film  Festival, and the role of goodwill ambassadors. Describing   activities, success stories and lessons learned from the International  Year of  Biodiversity, Tim Christophersen, CBD, said national  governments play a key  role as primary organizers of activities and  can, inter alia: build  national committees, including  municipalities, NGOs, and other stakeholders;  evaluate the impact of  activities at the national level as a basis for overall  impact  evaluation; and translate and spread information. Regarding lessons   learned, he highlighted: websites that allow for user updates; regional   ambassadors; use of films and photos rather than text to be more visual  and  creative; and regional conferences. Many participants   commented on the opportunity presented by the IYF to promote the  importance of  forests to the general public and to politicians, and  described planned  national activities for the IYF. Participants brought  up: the important role  that NGOs will play in national promotion  activities; youth as one of the  principal targets of campaign efforts;  and involving family forests and  national and international forester  organizations. McAlpine  commented on  the potential of NFP facilities to promote the IYF, and that the  IYF  is not just an exercise in public relations, but a chance to have   substantive discussions at the national and local levels. GROWING FOREST   PARTNERSHIPS: On Thursday, Sophie Grouwels, FAO,  chaired the  session and explained that Growing Forest Partnerships (GFP) is an   initiative that was launched in February 2009 by IUCN, the International   Institute for Environment and Development, FAO and the World Bank,  designed to  build international and local networks to enhance the local  control and  sustainable management of forests. Alda Salomão, Centro  Terra Viva, described a  project involving two forest communities in  Mozambique, one of several GFP  pilot countries. She noted that GFP has  helped communities engage with and  influence Mozambique’s national REDD  Strategy. Lennart Ackzell,   Federation of Swedish Family Forest Owners, said that GFP has played an   influential role in the ability of his organization to advance its  goals, and  has enabled the creation of a “Rights-Holders Group”  composed of the  International Alliance for Indigenous and Tribal  Peoples of Tropical Forests,  the Global Alliance for Community Forests  and the International Family Forest  Alliance. He noted the need to  disaggregate the term “forest investment,”  noting that while investment  can benefit locally-controlled forestry, often it  does not. Dominic Elson,   advisor to the Government of Indonesia, described the barriers that need  to be  overcome in order to link community-based and small-scale forest  management  with investors. He cautioned that this type of forestry  risks being shuffled into  a firm’s “corporate social responsibility  ghetto” and given low priority, and  that interested groups must make  the business case for it to be considered a  valuable asset. Noting that  many NGOs bemoan the “failure” of the concession  model of forestry, he  argued that concessions do exactly what they are intended  to  do—produce large amounts of timber as cheaply as possible—and that it is  up  to the low-impact forest sector to distinguish itself from this  large-scale  industrial model. EMBRACING   COMPLEXITY: MEETING FOREST GOVERNANCE CHALLENGES: Alexander  Buck, IUFRO, chaired this event on Friday. Su See Lee, IUFRO,  recalled  that IUFRO, at its XXIII World Congress, adopted a decision to enhance   its contribution to the science-policy interface, and said that this is  the  intent of the Global Forest Expert Panels (GFEP). Jeremy Rayner,   University of Saskatchewan and Chair of GFEP on the International Forest   Regime, provided an overview of the GFEP initiative, which involves 30  experts  from multiple disciplines. He recognized that the very terms  “regime” and  “governance” are contentious. He said that both the  drivers of forest loss and  the governance arrangements that have  developed in response are extremely  complex, but noted that this is  also the case with other regimes, such as  climate change. He suggested  that instead of attempting to reduce regime  fragmentation, it may be  best to embrace inter-institutional complexity. He  also noted the need  to think beyond the forestry paradigm to consider the wider   multi-sectoral context within which forest-related decisions are made,   referring to this approach as “forests+”. He said that the GFEP report  will be  launched at UNFF9 in January 2011. Constance  McDermott,  Oxford University, presented selected findings from the GFEP on the   core actors and issues defining international forest governance, and the   six-themed framework that was employed in the analysis. Drawing upon  the theme  “Forest Extent” as an example, she showed how the actors  involved and the  discourse surrounding the issue have changed over  time. Heidi Vanhanen,   Finnish Forest Research Institute, presented a policy brief entitled  “Asian  Forests: Working for People and Nature,” prepared by IUFRO-World  Forests,  Society and Environment Special Project. She highlighted new  emerging  opportunities for Asian forests, such as carbon finance  mechanisms, PES, and  new institutional investors, stressing that these  are forest-related issues,  not only forest issues. She said that by  2025, one in four people in the world  will live in an Asian city, and  that there will be one billion more middle  class people in Asia alone,  noting implications of this for land and resource  use. She called for  improved land use planning, tenure and public sector  reform, and  sustainable landscapes, to ensure forest benefits will reach the   people. Rayner concluded  that  the challenge was to move beyond the forestry sector to involve broader   society and the public sector for better outcomes. Responding to   questions, Rayner stated that the expert panel had debated the use of  the  concepts “forestry+” versus “forests+,” deciding on the latter to  stress the  need to move away from the “forestry box,” which has been  limited in its  ability to respond to current pressing concerns. He said  that complexity would  have to be embraced at the appropriate scale,  keeping in mind the principle of  subsidiarity. One participant  commented on the need to strengthen forest  institutions as a principal  means to address cross-sectoral cooperation. PRESENTATION   OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TUSCIA INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE-FORUM: On  Friday in COFO plenary, Gerard Buttoud, University of Tuscia,  presented  the results from a three-day seminar on emerging economic mechanisms   and their implications for forest-related policies and sector  governance, held  as part of World Forest Week. He said that a great  number of success stories of  economic mechanisms for innovation and  certification existed, but that  difficulties arise as these mechanisms  fundamentally change the framework of  forest governance and require the  adaptation of national policies. He  recommended continuing dialogue  between scientists and policy makers,  suggesting that a rigorous  scientific analysis is more helpful than work  resulting from  consultancies, since scientific criticism, although sometimes  more  pessimistic, is more useful for policy making. CLOSING  PLENARY  On Friday, Xiao   Wangxin, China, Chair of the Drafting Committee, introduced the draft  report  (COFO 2010/REP/Draft) for adoption. Delegates went through the  report  item-by-item. On emerging opportunities and challenges in forest  finance and  forest governance, Nicaragua requested adding that FAO be  requested to support  countries in exploring the innovative forms of  financing for development  currently under consideration by the UN  system. On programme priorities for FAO  in forestry, Canada called for  working with the CPF on increasing the  effectiveness of existing  sources of finance, and working towards maximizing  the SFM benefits of  emerging financing opportunities such as REDD. On  communicating the  role of forests in sustainable development, Canada also added  that  consideration be given to strengthening the idea and profile of an   international day of forests. Delegates adopted the report with these   amendments. Rojas-Briales  thanked  delegates for their contributions that allowed for a “360 degree view   on forests,” and COFO Chair Lönnblad closed the meeting at 4:32 pm. COFO 2010   REPORT: The report of COFO 2010, as adopted during  the closing  plenary, contains the following elements: 
On the way  forward  for the FRA, the Committee recommended that the next FRA be prepared by   2015, and that it give priority to improving information on  deforestation and  forest degradation rates, forest carbon stocks, trees  outside forests, and the  roles of forests in protecting soil and water  resources and providing  livelihoods. The Committee requested FAO to  prepare a long-term strategy for  FRA, streamline forest-related  reporting, investigate the feasibility of more  frequent updates on key  variables, and coordinate international efforts and  build country  capacity to use remote sensing to monitor forests.On forest   biodiversity in the context of climate change, the Committee requested  FAO to  strengthen country capacity, continue efforts to develop a  report on the state  of the world’s forest genetic resources, and  strengthen its capacity to share  information related to biodiversity  conservation.On forests  and  water in the context of climate change, the Committee recommended that   countries intensify work in this area and pay increased attention to   socio-economic issues related to forests and water and financing  mechanisms  such as PES, and recommended that FAO continue to review  critical related  issues and facilitate information exchange.On  strengthening  financial support for SFM, the Committee requested FAO to support   national efforts in this matter, and recommended that countries take  advantage  of existing experiences and lessons to diversify their  economic base for  financing SFM.On forest   governance, the Committee recommended that FAO support countries to  achieve  their goals in strengthening domestic forest law enforcement  and governance,  and take into account existing regional initiatives in  its work to propose an  analytical framework for assessing and  monitoring socio-economic and  institutional indicators.On REDD+, the   Committee requested FAO to assist countries to value and utilize the  potential  contributions of forests and trees outside forests in climate  change mitigation  and adaptation, focusing on FAO’s comparative  advantage in areas such as  integrating forests in national climate  change strategies, strengthening  information exchange and cooperation,  supporting monitoring activities,  implementing best practices in forest  management, and overcoming the  constraints linked to carbon sink  extension and the root causes of  deforestation and forest degradation.On decisions  and  recommendations of FAO bodies of interest to the Committee, the  Committee  requested the Near East Forestry and Range Commission to  review the activities  of relevant bodies engaged in forest and range  activities in the region,  endorsed changes in its rules of procedure on  officers, sessions, and records and  papers, requested the Secretariat  to prepare a draft multi-year programme of  work for 2012-2015, and  recommended that FAO maintain the Panel of Experts on  Forest Genetic  Resources.On programme   priorities for FAO in forestry, the Committee recommended that FAO more  clearly  identify areas of emphasis in future documentation, taking into  account its  strengths, and recommended FAO to prioritize, inter  alia: improving the  FRA programme, including by assisting  countries in providing robust estimates  of key parameters;  strengthening links to the regional forest committees,  fostering  collaboration among CPF members, and working with CPF partners to   increase availability and the effectiveness of existing forest finance;   emphasizing cross-sectoral integration, and supporting community  forestry as  well as innovative approaches to forest governance; in SFM,  broadening  understanding and tools, highlighting the multiple  functions of forests; and on  the social and livelihood values of  forests, helping to develop community  capacity for accessing markets.On  communicating  the role of forests in sustainable development, the Committee   recommended that countries take action to better integrate forests with   development strategies. The Committee further requested FAO to increase  its  efforts in promoting SFM by, inter alia: clarifying the  role of forests  for sustainable development and achieving the MDGs;  developing tools to value  the full range of forests goods and services;  and building on the opportunities  offered by the International Year of  Forests 2011.On the preparations  for the WFC XIV, the Committee commended the  Governments of India and  South Africa for their interest in hosting WFC XIV and  the high quality  of their applications, and recommended that the Council  consider these  submissions for decision, noting that several delegations  recognized  that no WFC has yet taken place on the African continent, and  further  recognized the potential the first congress on the continent could   have. A  BRIEF ANALYSIS OF COFO 2010  “You cannot  solve  a problem from the same consciousness that created it. You must learn  to  see the world anew.” - Albert Einstein The 20th session of  the Committee on Forestry of the UN Food and  Agriculture Organization  (COFO 2010) took place at a time when the world’s  forests are receiving  more attention than ever. Many would say that this  attention is long  overdue, given that we are losing 13 million hectares of  forest—about  the size of Greece—on an annual basis. Most importantly, forest  issues  are coming to the attention of non-traditional audiences outside the   forest sector and receiving mainstream media attention, illustrated by  an issue  of The Economist focused on forests, released just  prior to COFO 2010.  Much of this attention can be attributed to the  heightened recognition of the  contribution that deforestation and  forest degradation make to carbon  emissions. With the International  Year of Forests less than three months away,  COFO 2010 presented a good  opportunity to reflect on the state of the world’s forests  and  international efforts to address underlying drivers of forest loss. This analysis  will  discuss what new information was brought to light during COFO 2010, and   what the meeting revealed in terms of FAO’s role in solving the  problems that  are eating away at the world’s forests, including its  ability to engage with  actors outside of the forest sector, in order to  develop a new approach to an  age-old problem. FRA 2010:  WHEN IS A FOREST NOT A FOREST?  The most  anticipated  event of the week was the launch of the Global Forest Resources   Assessment 2010 (FRA), a comprehensive analysis of the state of the  world’s  forests put forth by the FAO every five years. It contains a  wealth of data  covering a range of forest issues and values, including  on socio-economic  functions, biomass and carbon stocks, forest health,  and the status of legal  and policy frameworks. However, the statistic  that is most often used is the  rate of deforestation cited above, and  this, in turn, is underwritten by the  FAO’s definition of “forest”:  “land spanning more than 0.5 hectares with trees  higher than 5 meters  and a canopy cover of more than 10 percent, or trees able  to reach  these thresholds…” The simplicity of   this definition is intended to provide an easily applied metric that  will allow  universal application and comparison. However, there are a  number of countries  and interest groups that take issue with the  definition, in that it fails to  differentiate between: diverse forest  ecosystems; intact and degraded forest;  or between natural forest and  plantations. In fact, forest that has been cut  down, but is expected to  eventually regenerate, is still counted as forest.  Also, as raised by  Ethiopia at this meeting, ecosystems with naturally sparse  tree cover  are not counted as forests, even though they might be in much better   condition, and more likely to persist than a heavily logged tropical  forest  that still meets the 10 percent rule. Because of this   problematic definition, many external audiences are more concerned about  the  loss of “primary forest,” a separate statistic also included in  the FRA,  estimated to amount to an alarming 40 million hectares lost  between 2000 and  2010. However, even this definition allows for logged  forest to eventually be  considered “primary” again, if it is allowed to  regenerate over time. However, the   statistic most often cited at COFO is the net forest loss or  gain, which  allows the loss of primary forest to be offset by forest  regrowth and  establishment of plantations, and was heralded as a great  success. While the  FRA presentation mentioned that four million  hectares of primary forest per  year had been lost between 2005 and  2010, it was quick to point out that  plantations had expanded by nearly  5 million hectares during the same period,  almost entirely in China.  This is reflective of FAO’s overall approach to  considering forest  extent, and emphasis on forest management. The question is  can this  paradigm contribute to solving the current problems facing the world’s   forests? The controversy  over  the definition issue is nothing new, and the lack of response to   Ethiopia’s intervention indicated that there was little appetite within  COFO to  open it up. While this issue has always been a bone of  contention with  environmental and indigenous peoples’ groups, in the  past year it also received  attention within the academic and climate  community, since a weak definition  poses a risk to reducing emissions  from deforestation and forest degradation  (REDD). This was illustrated  by Indonesia’s announcement earlier this year that  it would reclassify  its palm oil plantations as forests, and thus become  potentially  eligible for REDD credits for this highly emissive activity. REDD+  As was the case   during the previous session of COFO, all eyes remained focused on REDD+  and the  potential financing it might provide for forests. At the same  time, half a  world away in Tianjin, China, climate negotiators were  meeting to discuss the  same subject, perhaps indicating a lack of  coordination between the two  regimes. However, the Tianjin talks have  run into their own share of problems:  the draft REDD+ agreement did not  advance during the week of negotiations, and  the REDD+ Partnership, a  group of 68 donor and recipient countries trying to  fast-track REDD  implementation, may be at risk of imploding due to disagreement  over  fundamental issues such as stakeholder participation. Plans for a   technical meeting of the Partnership in Nagoya at CBD COP 10 were  cancelled,  and with key aspects of the Partnership still unclear, many  participants were calling  into question the value of a still scheduled  ministerial meeting later this  month. Given that the road to REDD is  looking rockier than initially predicted,  what does FAO have to offer  to the discussion? After COFO 2010, what more do we  know about FAO’s  relevance to the REDD debate? The chorus  repeated  throughout COFO 2010 was that FAO’s role is to push for a “360 degree”   view of forests that takes into consideration all functions they perform  and  values they deliver, to ensure that the REDD mechanism does not  get skewed  towards carbon-centrism. But the overall consensus was that  REDD needs to go  ahead, and quickly, with a view to enabling access to  the much-anticipated  funding. Over the course  of  the meeting, delegates had also come to use the “360” term to refer to  the  need for REDD and forest policy in general to take into  consideration pressures  that lie outside the forestry sector. This  could signal an opportunity for  changing the paradigm reflected in the  focus on “net” forest loss or gain, to a  more nuanced approach and more  refined definition of “forest,” reflective of  ecosystem diversity. As reflected in  an  intervention by Afghanistan, the desirability of REDD+ is a given within   COFO, with discussion more focused on the range of issues that need to  be  resolved to make it a successful mechanism, such as capacity  building, good  governance, and involvement of all stakeholders. The EU  was more cautious,  urging all to consider REDD as but one of several  finance mechanisms needed to  support sustainable forest management  (SFM), and saying that FAO’s programme  priorities focus too much on  REDD and should give more attention to  “sustainable land use in  general.” The EU, US and Japan urged FAO to limit its  involvement in  REDD+ to where it has institutional comparative advantages:  reflecting  both that successfully realizing REDD requires a concerted effort in   which FAO can play a certain important role, and that important  challenges for  FAO exist in forestry beyond the role of forests for  climate change. However, the most   critical discussion of REDD+ came out of several World Forest Week  events,  involving experts outside the forestry discipline. One speaker  stressed the  need to design institutions capable of transforming the  way we see the problem,  as opposed to adapting or responding to change.  Another speaker said that there  were fundamental errors of logic  underpinning REDD+ that need to be addressed  before rushing towards  implementation. Yet another pointed out that by focusing  on reducing  emissions instead of deforestation itself immediately frames the  issue  into one where technical expertise dominates, due to the skills and  technology  required to measure forest carbon, and biases discussions  towards a market  approach that allows for carbon credits to be bought  and sold. Several  presenters at the Growing Forest Partnerships event  called for local control of  forests and reclamation of the term  “sustainable management” away from  large-scale industrial producers, as  it is emerging that this activity will  form a major component of  REDD+. However, not many delegates participated in  these events, and  since the discussions took place outside of COFO plenary,  they are not  included in the COFO report. THE  INTER-SECTORAL PATH FORWARD: A “360 DEGREE”  FOREST DEFINITION  Repeated   interventions throughout COFO 2010 called for an inter-sectoral approach  to  forests; however, there are several different takes on what is  meant by that,  and each offers a way forward. The first   interpretation is that greater attention needs to be paid to the fact  that some  of the most important land-use decisions impacting forests  originate outside  the forest sector, including agricultural and  infrastructural expansion. Such  observations are nothing new, and  echoed by those made in previous COFO  sessions and in other forest  processes, such as the UN Forum on Forests and the  International  Tropical Timber Organization. The question is how can this be   accomplished? As one COFO participant noted, FAO, as the world’s chief   authority on agriculture, is well positioned to bring agricultural  decision  makers to the table to talk about how these sectors intersect,  and how to limit  their impact on forests. Other sectors, such as  energy and mining, could also  be engaged, to move away from the  sector-isolated “silo” approach to decision  making that has been  acknowledged as part of the problem. With 2011 designated  the  International Year of Forests, it may be time to invite these non-forest   sector actors to the “celebrations,” and discuss what the forest  community  needs from them. Other calls  referring  to the need to think “inter-sectorally” refer to the need to engage   with the climate regime and communicate the “360 degree” message, urging  REDD  to recognize forests as more than just “sticks of carbon.” In  order to do this,  FAO could lead the way, and show that foresters value  forests for more than  just the timber they produce, with the corollary  being that primary forests and  plantations serve different functions  and should not be considered  interchangeable. Relevant to this was an  intervention made by a representative  of the Convention on Biological  Diversity noting that there is a strong  correlation in forests between  high biodiversity levels and forest carbon  stocks, with more of both  being present in primary forests than in plantations. A possible step   towards recognizing the impact of other sectors may be to revisit the  definition  of forest to reflect the “360 degree” approach. For example,  under the current  definition, tropical forests can be subjected to the  expansion of roads without  registering a reduction in forest extent in  the FRA, even though roads are  often a precursor to eventual  deforestation and agricultural expansion.  Similarly, the other  interpretation of “360 degree” approach, which takes into  consideration  the multiple values that forests deliver, could be drawn upon to   inform a more nuanced definition. Another interpretation   of thinking “inter-sectorally” was not brought up during COFO plenary,  but at a  World Forest Week event. Although all countries were in  agreement that a major  part of the problem lies outside the forest  sector, a member of the Global  Forest Expert Panel was the only one to  suggest that part of the solution to  the current forest crisis may need  to come from expertise outside of the forest  sector as well: the  problem may require a broader lens than foresters can  provide. Just as  foresters have reservations about entrusting forests to the  climate  regime, others, such as biologists and human rights advocates, have   their own reservations about entrusting forests entirely to the forestry   discipline. As FAO Assistant   Director General Eduardo Rojas-Briales noted on several occasions,  decisions  concerning forests need to be considered in the context of  broader societal  choices concerning land use as a whole. This may  afford a path to a changing  “consciousness” and learning to see the  world anew. UPCOMING  MEETINGS  UNECE Timber   Committee Market Discussions and Policy Forum: The  forum will  address: wood energy, carbon markets and certified forest products   markets, and the role of wood products in mitigating climate change. dates:  11-14  October 2010  location: Geneva,   Switzerland  contact: UNECE  Forestry and Timber  Section  phone: +41-22-917-1286  fax: +41-22-917-0041  e mail: info.timber@unece.org www: http://timber.unece.org/index.php?id=302 CBD COP 10:  The tenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties (COP) to the   Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) is expected to assess  achievement of  the 2010 target to reduce significantly the rate of  biodiversity loss, adopt an  international regime on access and  benefit-sharing and celebrate the  International Year of Biodiversity  2010.  dates: 18-29 October 2010  location: Nagoya  (Aichi), Japan  contact: CBD  Secretariat  phone:  +1-514-288-2220  fax: +1-514-288-6588  e-mail:  secretariat@cbd.int  www: http://www.cbd.int/cop10 30th Meeting   of the CDM Afforestation/Reforestation Working Group: The  working group on afforestation and reforestation (AR) for Clean   Development Mechanism (CDM) project activities was established to  prepare  recommendations on submitted proposals for new baseline and  monitoring  methodologies for CDM AR project activities. The working  group is expected to  work in cooperation with the CDM Methodology  Panel. dates: 18-20 October  2010  location: Bonn,  Germany  contact: UNFCCC Secretariat  phone: +49-228-815-1000  fax: +49-228-  815-1999  e-mail: secretariat@unfccc.int  www: http://cdm.unfccc.int/Panels/ar UN REDD Fifth   Policy Board Meeting: The Fifth Policy Board  meeting of the  UN-REDD Programme will be followed by a joint meeting with the  Forest  Carbon Partnership Facility (FCPF) and Forest Investment Programme (FIP)   governing bodies, to be held on 6 November 2010. dates: 4-5  November  2010  location: Washington, DC,  USA  contact:  Cheryl Rosebush  phone: +41-22-917-8410  e-mail:  cheryl.rosebush@un-redd.org  www: http://www.un-redd.org/PolicyBoard/5thPolicyBoard/tabid/1002/Default.aspx Enhancing the   Legality of the International Timber Trade: Creating Enabling  Environments and  Opportunities for the Private Sector and other  Stakeholders: This Country-Led Initiative in support of the UN  Forum on Forests is  organized by the Governments of Viet Nam, Finland,  the Netherlands, and the  United States. dates: 15-19  November 2010  location: Hanoi, Viet Nam  contact:  Tran Kim Long  phone: +844-38436812  fax:  +844-37330752  e-mail: longtk.htqt@mard.gov.vn www:  http://www.un.org/esa/forests/gov-unff.html Sixteenth   Conference of the Parties to the UNFCCC and Sixth Meeting of the Parties  to the  Kyoto Protocol: The 33rd meetings of the SBI and   SBSTA will also take place concurrently.  dates: 29  November to 10 December 2010  location: Cancun, Mexico   contact: UNFCCC Secretariat  phone: +49-228-815-1000   fax: +49-228-815-1999  email: secretariat@unfccc.int   www: http://unfccc.int Agriculture   and Rural Development Day 2010: This event will be  held  alongside UNFCCC COP 16, and will be hosted by the Consultative Group on   International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), the Global Donor Platform  for  Rural Development, the CGIAR Challenge Program on Climate Change,  Agriculture  and Food Security (CCAFS), and the Ministry of Agriculture,  Livestock, Rural  Development, Fisheries and Food of Mexico. date:  4 December 2010  location: Cancun, Mexico  contact:  ARDD Secretariat  e-mail: info@agricultureday.org  www: http://www.agricultureday.org Forest Day 4: This  event, hosted by the Center for International Forestry  Research, will  be held alongside UNFCCC COP 16. date: 5 December   2010  location: Cancun,  Mexico  contact:  CIFOR  secretariat  e-mail:cifor-fcc@cgiar.org  www: http://www.forestsclimatechange.org/ForestDay-4.html 46th Meeting   of the International Tropical Timber Council: This  meeting  will take place together with associated sessions of the four ITTC   committees. dates: 13-18 December 2010  location:  Yokohama, Japan  contact: ITTO Secretariat  phone:  +81-45-223-1110  fax: +81-45-223-1111 email:itto@itto.int  www:  http://www.itto.or.jp Ninth session   of the UN Forum on Forests: The theme for UNFF 9 is  “Forests  for people, livelihoods and poverty eradication” and the Forum is   expected to complete discussions on approaches for implementing SFM.  dates:  24 January - 4 February  2011  location: UN  Headquarters,  New York  contact: UNFF  Secretariat  phone:  +1-212-963-3401  fax: +1-917-367-3186  email:  unff@un.org   www: http://www.un.org/esa/forests/ International   Symposium on Ecosystem and Landscape-level Approaches to  Sustainability: This event, organized by the Regional  Government of Castilla y  León, Spain, the International Model Forest  Network Secretariat, FAO and CBD  Secretariat, aims at advancing the  understanding and application of ecosystem  and landscape-level  approaches to sustainable land use and management. dates: 22-26  March 2011  location: Burgos,  Spain  phone: +34-983-304-181   fax: +34-983-308-671  e-mail: info@globalforum2011.net   www: http://www.globalforum2011.net/ Sixth Forest   Europe Ministerial Conference: This meeting of  ministers  responsible for forests in Europe will discuss the elaboration of a   strengthened policy framework for sustainable forest management in  Europe. dates: 14-16 June 2011  location: Oslo,   Norway  phone: +47-64-94-8930  fax: +47-64-94-8939   e-mail: liaison.unit.oslo@foresteurope.org   www: http://www.foresteurope.org/eng/Commitments/Documents/Meetings_2011/FOREST+EUROPE+Ministerial+Conference.9UFRrY5M.ips   Second Asia   Pacific Forestry Week: This event will take place  in  conjunction with the 24th session of the Asia-Pacific Forestry  Commission. dates: 7-11 November 2011  location:  China contact: FAO  phone: +66-2-697-4000   fax: +66-2-697-4445  email: FAO-RAP@fao.org  www:  http://www.fao.org/world/regional/rap COFO 21:  The 21st session of the FAO Committee on Forestry will take place  in  October 2012. dates: to be determined in October 2012  location:  Rome, Italy  contact: COFO Secretariat  phone:  + 39-06-5705-3925  fax: +39-06-5705-3152 email:  cofo@fao.org  www:  http://www.fao.org/forestry/en/ |