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PREAMBLE
(a) The subject of forests is related to the entire range
of environmental and development issues and opportunities,
including the right to socio-economic development on a sustainable
basis.
(b) The guiding objective of these principles is to contribute
to the management, conservation and sustainable development
of forests and to provide for their multiple and complementary
functions and uses.
(c) Forestry issues and opportunities should be examined in
a holistic and balanced manner within the overall context
of environment and development, taking into consideration
the multiple functions and uses of forests, including traditional
uses, and the likely economic and social stress when these
uses are constrained or restricted, as well as the potential
for development that sustainable forest management can offer.
(d) These principles reflect a first global consensus on forests.
In committing themselves to the prompt implementation of these
principles, countries also decide to keep them under assessment
for their adequacy with regard to further international cooperation
on forest issues.
(e) These principles should apply to all types of forests,
both natural and planted, in all geographic regions and climatic
zones, including austral, boreal, subtemperate, temperate,
subtropical and tropical.
(f) All types of forests embody complex and unique ecological
processes which are the basis for their present and potential
capacity to provide resources to satisfy human needs as well
as environmental values, and as such their sound management
and conservation is of concern to the Governments of the countries
to which they belong and are of value to local communities
and to the environment as a whole.
(g) Forests are essential to economic development and the
maintenance of all forms of life.
(h) Recognizing that the responsibility for forest management,
conservation and sustainable development is in many States
allocated among federal/national, state/provincial and local
levels of government, each State, in accordance with its constitution
and/or national legislation, should pursue these principles
at the appropriate level of government.
PRINCIPLES
PRINCIPLES/ELEMENTS
1.
(a) "States have, in accordance with the Charter of the
United Nations and the principles of international law, the
sovereign right to exploit their own resources pursuant to
their own environmental policies and have the responsibility
to ensure that activities within their jurisdiction or control
do not cause damage to the environment of other States or
of areas beyond the limits of national jurisdiction".
(b) The agreed full incremental cost of achieving benefits
associated with forest conservation and sustainable development
requires increased international cooperation and should be
equitably shared by the international community.
2. (a) States have the sovereign and inalienable right to
utilize, manage and develop their forests in accordance with
their development needs and level of socio-economic development
and on the basis of national policies consistent with sustainable
development and legislation, including the conversion of such
areas for other uses within the overall socio-economic development
plan and based on rational land-use policies.
(b) Forest resources and forest lands should be sustainably
managed to meet the social, economic, ecological, cultural
and spiritual human needs of present and future generations.
These needs are for forest products and services, such as
wood and wood products, water, food, fodder, medicine, fuel,
shelter, employment, recreation, habitats for wildlife, landscape
diversity, carbon sinks and reservoirs, and for other forest
products. Appropriate measures should be taken to protect
forests against harmful effects of pollution, including air-borne
pollution, fires, pests and diseases in order to maintain
their full multiple value.
(c) The provision of timely, reliable and accurate information
on forests and forest ecosystems is essential for public understanding
and informed decision-making and should be ensured. (d) Governments
should promote and provide opportunities for the participation
of interested parties, including local communities and indigenous
people, industries, labour, non-governmental organizations
and individuals, forest dwellers and women, in the development,
implementation and planning of national forest policies. 3.
(a) National policies and strategies should provide a framework
for increased efforts, including the development and strengthening
of institutions and programmes for the management, conservation
and sustainable development of forests and forest lands. (b)
International institutional arrangements, building on those
organizations and mechanisms already in existence, as appropriate,
should facilitate international cooperation in the field of
forests. (c) All aspects of environmental protection and social
and economic development as they relate to forests and forest
lands should be integrated and comprehensive. 4. The vital
role of all types of forests in maintaining the ecological
processes and balance at the local, national, regional and
global levels through, inter alia, their role in protecting
fragile ecosystems, watersheds and freshwater resources and
as rich storehouses of biodiversity and biological resources
and sources of genetic material for biotechnology products,
as well as photosynthesis, should be recognized. 5. (a) National
forest policies should recognize and duly support the identity,
culture and the rights of indigenous people, their communities
and other communities and forest dwellers. Appropriate conditions
should be promoted for these groups to enable them to have
an economic stake in forest use, perform economic activities,
and achieve and maintain cultural identity and social organization,
as well as adequate levels of livelihood and well-being, through,
inter alia, those land tenure arrangements which serve as
incentives for the sustainable management of forests.
(b) The full participation of women in all aspects of the
management, conservation and sustainable development of forests
should be actively promoted.
6. (a) All types of forests play an important role in meeting
energy requirements through the provision of a renewable source
of bio-energy, particularly in developing countries, and the
demands for fuelwood for household and industrial needs should
be met through sustainable forest management, afforestation
and reforestation. To this end, the potential contribution
of plantations of both indigenous and introduced species for
the provision of both fuel and industrial wood should be recognized.
(b) National policies and programmes should take into account
the relationship, where it exists, between the conservation,
management and sustainable development of forests and all
aspects related to the production, consumption, recycling
and/or final disposal of forest products.
(c) Decisions taken on the management, conservation and sustainable
development of forest resources should benefit, to the extent
practicable, from a comprehensive assessment of economic and
non-economic values of forest goods and services and of the
environmental costs and benefits. The development and improvement
of methodologies for such evaluations should be promoted.
(d) The role of planted forests and permanent agricultural
crops as sustainable and environmentally sound sources of
renewable energy and industrial raw material should be recognized,
enhanced and promoted. Their contribution to the maintenance
of ecological processes, to offsetting pressure on primary/old-growth
forest and to providing regional employment and development
with the adequate involvement of local inhabitants should
be recognized and enhanced. (e) Natural forests also constitute
a source of goods and services, and their conservation, sustainable
management and use should be promoted.
7. (a) Efforts should be made to promote a supportive international
economic climate conducive to sustained and environmentally
sound development of forests in all countries, which include,
inter alia, the promotion of sustainable patterns of production
and consumption, the eradication of poverty and the promotion
of food security. (b) Specific financial resources should
be provided to developing countries with significant forest
areas which establish programmes for the conservation of forests
including protected natural forest areas. These resources
should be directed notably to economic sectors which would
stimulate economic and social substitution activities.
8. (a) Efforts should be undertaken towards the greening of
the world. All countries, notably developed countries, should
take positive and transparent action towards reforestation,
afforestation and forest conservation, as appropriate. (b)
Efforts to maintain and increase forest cover and forest productivity
should be undertaken in ecologically, economically and socially
sound ways through the rehabilitation, reforestation and re-establishment
of trees and forests on unproductive, degraded and deforested
lands, as well as through the management of existing forest
resources.
(c) The implementation of national policies and programmes
aimed at forest management, conservation and sustainable development,
particularly in developing countries, should be supported
by international financial and technical cooperation, including
through the private sector, where appropriate.
(d) Sustainable forest management and use should be carried
out in accordance with national development policies and priorities
and on the basis of environmentally sound national guidelines.
In the formulation of such guidelines, account should be taken,
as appropriate and if applicable, of relevant internationally
agreed methodologies and criteria.
(e) Forest management should be integrated with management
of adjacent areas so as to maintain ecological balance and
sustainable productivity.
(f) National policies and/or legislation aimed at management,
conservation and sustainable development of forests should
include the protection of ecologically viable representative
or unique examples of forests, including primary/old-growth
forests, cultural, spiritual, historical, religious and other
unique and valued forests of national importance.
(g) Access to biological resources, including genetic material,
shall be with due regard to the sovereign rights of the countries
where the forests are located and to the sharing on mutually
agreed terms of technology and profits from biotechnology
products that are derived from these resources.
(h) National policies should ensure that environmental impact
assessments should be carried out where actions are likely
to have significant adverse impacts on important forest resources,
and where such actions are subject to a decision of a competent
national authority.
9. (a) The efforts of developing countries to strengthen the
management, conservation and sustainable development of their
forest resources should be supported by the international
community, taking into account the importance of redressing
external indebtedness, particularly where aggravated by the
net transfer of resources to developed countries, as well
as the problem of achieving at least the replacement value
of forests through improved market access for forest products,
especially processed products. In this respect, special attention
should also be given to the countries undergoing the process
of transition to market economies.
(b) The problems that hinder efforts to attain the conservation
and sustainable use of forest resources and that stem from
the lack of alternative options available to local communities,
in particular the urban poor and poor rural populations who
are economically and socially dependent on forests and forest
resources, should be addressed by Governments and the international
community.
(c) National policy formulation with respect to all types
of forests should take account of the pressures and demands
imposed on forest ecosystems and resources from influencing
factors outside the forest sector, and intersectoral means
of dealing with these pressures and demands should be sought.
10. New and additional financial resources should be provided
to developing countries to enable them to sustainably manage,
conserve and develop their forest resources, including through
afforestation, reforestation and combating deforestation and
forest and land degradation.
11. In order to enable, in particular, developing countries
to enhance their endogenous capacity and to better manage,
conserve and develop their forest resources, the access to
and transfer of environmentally sound technologies and corresponding
know-how on favourable terms, including on concessional and
preferential terms, as mutually agreed, in accordance with
the relevant provisions of Agenda 21, should be promoted,
facilitated and financed, as appropriate.
12. (a) Scientific research, forest inventories and assessments
carried out by national institutions which take into account,
where relevant, biological, physical, social and economic
variables, as well as technological development and its application
in the field of sustainable forest management, conservation
and development, should be strengthened through effective
modalities, including international cooperation. In this context,
attention should also be given to research and development
of sustainably harvested non-wood products. (b) National and,
where appropriate, regional and international institutional
capabilities in education, training, science, technology,
economics, anthropology and social aspects of forests and
forest management are essential to the conservation and sustainable
development of forests and should be strengthened. (c) International
exchange of information on the results of forest and forest
management research and development should be enhanced and
broadened, as appropriate, making full use of education and
training institutions, including those in the private sector.
(d) Appropriate indigenous capacity and local knowledge regarding
the conservation and sustainable development of forests should,
through institutional and financial support, and in collaboration
with the people in local communities concerned, be recognized,
respected, recorded, developed and, as appropriate, introduced
in the implementation of programmes. Benefits arising from
the utilization of indigenous knowledge should therefore be
equitably shared with such people.
13. (a) Trade in forest products should be based on non-discriminatory
and multilaterally agreed rules and procedures consistent
with international trade law and practices. In this context,
open and free international trade in forest products should
be facilitated. (b) Reduction or removal of tariff barriers
and impediments to the provision of better market access and
better prices for higher value-added forest products and their
local processing should be encouraged to enable producer countries
to better conserve and manage their renewable forest resources.
(c) Incorporation of environmental costs and benefits into
market forces and mechanisms, in order to achieve forest conservation
and sustainable development, should be encouraged both domestically
and internationally.
(d) Forest conservation and sustainable development policies
should be integrated with economic, trade and other relevant
policies. (e) Fiscal, trade, industrial, transportation and
other policies and practices that may lead to forest degradation
should be avoided. Adequate policies, aimed at management,
conservation and sustainable development of forests, including
where appropriate, incentives, should be encouraged.
14. Unilateral measures, incompatible with international obligations
or agreements, to restrict and/or ban international trade
in timber or other forest products should be removed or avoided,
in order to attain long-term sustainable forest management.
15. Pollutants, particularly air-borne pollutants, including
those responsible for acidic deposition, that are harmful
to the health of forest ecosystems at the local, national,
regional and global levels should be controlled.
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