UNECE, FAO take stock of scarce forest resources of Central Asia and the Caucasus
Until now, there has been little information available to the international community regarding the state of forests in the Caucasus and Central Asia.
Today, however, the UNECE/FAO Forestry and Timber Section has released the first regional overview of the forest sector in these countries since they became independent in the 1990s.
The “State of Forests of the Caucasus and Central Asia” publication, launched today at a side event at the United Nations Forum on Forests, describes forest resources, the forest sector of the region, and the major threats facing forests. It also covers forest sector policies, institutions and policy responses that are planned or already in place, and it lists the main issues and challenges facing the forest sector in the region.
The forests of the Caucasus and Central Asia are vital in fighting erosion and desertification in the harsh climates of the region. They host a rich biodiversity and provide livelihoods for the rural population, who have few other sources of revenue. These forests also serve as important sources of wood for energy.
Forests in the Caucasus occupy less than 15 percent of the territory, and in Central Asia less than 10 percent. The exception is Georgia, more than 40 percent of which is covered by forests. Together, the forests and other wooded lands of the eight countries of the Caucasus and Central Asia cover more than 30 million ha, which is the size of Italy.
The forests of the region are special due to their crucial role in protection against erosion and soil loss in highly vulnerable ecosystems. Almost 90 percent of the forests and other wooded lands is designated for protective functions. In many areas, non-wood products from the forests – nuts (pistachios, walnuts, almonds, hazelnuts), fruit and berries, hay, medicinal herbs, mushrooms, honey, flower bulbs, tree seeds and others – play important roles in supporting rural livelihoods. Plantations of saxaul, for example, are one of the few means of helping villages around the Aral Sea, where a reduction of the water area has created a salty desert, with windblown toxic dust that is damaging to health and the environment.
However, these forests are subject to strong pressures, reducing their area and quality and limiting their ability to perform protection and livelihood functions. There is excessive cutting to provide fuelwood for local communities, who have few alternative sources of energy. The grazing of animals vital to local communities also degrades forests. Local forest management units are often ill-equipped and under-resourced to carry out their tasks.
All forests in the region are publicly owned and managed by government forest organisations, funded from central government budgets. All of the countries have forest laws and policy statements in place. However, forest sector issues have little visibility at the highest policy level.
“There is significant potential to increase the contribution that the forests of the Caucasus and Central Asia make to society and the environment,” said UNECE Executive Secretary Olga Algayerova. “However, to achieve this potential, there must be policy-level commitment over the long term to achieve ambitious but realistic goals and to provide sufficient resources to the forest sector, thus putting forest management in the region on a truly sustainable basis.”
Vladimir Rakhmanin, FAO Assistant Director-General and Regional Representative for Europe and Central Asia, agreed.
“All forests should be taken care of perpetually,” he said. “This applies even more to the rare, vulnerable and extremely rich forests of the Caucasus and Central Asia.”
7 May 2019, New York, United States