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Published by the
International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD)
Vol. 24 No. 1
Monday, 13 May 2002
THIRTY-SECOND SESSION OF THE INTERNATIONAL
TROPICAL TIMBER COUNCIL:
13-18 MAY 2002
The thirty-second session of the International
Tropical Timber Council (ITTC-32) will meet from 13-18 May 2002 in
Bali, Indonesia. The session will address, inter alia: the
Mangrove Conservation Programme; Guidelines for the Management of
Secondary Tropical Forests, Tropical Forest Restoration and
Rehabilitation of Degraded Forest Lands; strengthening sustainable
forest management (SFM) in Central African Countries (Congo Basin);
Objective 2000; certification; a long-term strategic plan; a
progress report on the implementation of the Work Programme for
2002; the Fellowship Programme; the Draft Annual Report for 2001;
and the Special Account and Bali Partnership Fund.
The 30th sessions of the ITTC’s Committees on
Economic Information and Market Intelligence (CEM), Reforestation
and Forest Management (CRF), and Forest Industry (CFI) will also
meet to, inter alia: consider their reports of completed
projects and pre-projects; conduct ex-post evaluations; review
projects, pre-projects and activities in progress; consider project
and pre-project proposals; and discuss policy work. The ITTC’s
Committee on Finance and Administration (CFA) will convene in its
eleventh session and will review: contributions to the
Administrative Budgets for 1986-2002; the current status of the
Administrative Account for 2002; resources of the Special Account
and the Bali Partnership Fund; the report for Financial Year 2001;
and the report of the CFA’s Working Group on New and Increased
Funding to the Organization.
A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE ITTA
The International Tropical Timber Agreement (ITTA)
was negotiated under the auspices of the United Nations Conference
on Trade and Development (UNCTAD). The purpose of the ITTA
negotiations were to: provide an effective framework for cooperation
and consultation between countries producing and consuming tropical
timber; promote the expansion and diversification of international
trade in tropical timber and the improvement of structural
conditions in the tropical timber market; promote and support
research and development with a view to improving forest management
and wood utilization; and encourage the development of national
policies aimed at sustainable utilization and conservation of
tropical forests and their genetic resources, and at maintaining the
ecological balance in the regions concerned. The ITTA was adopted on
18 November 1983, in Geneva, and entered into force on 1 April 1985.
The ITTA established the International Tropical
Timber Organization (ITTO). The ITTO provides a framework for
consultation among countries that produce and consume tropical
timber to discuss and exchange information and develop policies on
issues relating to the international trade and utilization of
tropical timber and the sustainable management of its resource base.
The ITTO is headquartered in Yokohama, Japan, and has 57 members –
31 producer country members and 25 consumer country members and the
European Union.
The governing body of the ITTO is the
International Tropical Timber Council (ITTC), which includes all
members. The Council is supported by four committees, which advise
and assist the Council on issues for consideration and decision.
Three of the committees deal with the ITTO's major areas of policy
and project work: Economic Information and Market Intelligence;
Reforestation and Forest Management; and Forest Industry. These
committees are supported by an Expert Panel for the Technical
Appraisal of Projects and Pre-projects, which reviews project
proposals for technical merit and relevance to ITTO objectives. The
fourth committee, on Finance and Administration, advises the Council
on budgetary matters and other administrative issues concerning the
management of the ITTO. The Council is also advised by an Informal
Advisory Group, which began meeting in 1998.
The ITTA remained in force for an initial period
of five years and was extended twice for two-year periods by
decisions of the Council. The Agreement was renegotiated during a
series of meetings in 1993-1994. On 26 January 1994, the Successor
Agreement to the ITTA (ITTA, 1994) was adopted. It was opened for
signature on 1 April 1994 and entered into force on 1 January 1997.
The new agreement continues to focus on the world tropical timber
economy, contains broader provisions for information sharing,
including non-tropical timber trade data, and allows for
consideration of non-tropical timber issues as they relate to
tropical timber. The ITTA, 1994 also established a fund for
sustainable management of tropical producing forests, the Bali
Partnership Fund, which assists producing members to make the
investments necessary to enhance their capacity to implement a
strategy for achieving exports of tropical timber and timber
products from sustainably managed sources by 2000 (the Year 2000
Objective).
THIRTY-FIRST SESSION OF THE ITTC: The 31st
session of the ITTC met in Yokohama, Japan, from 29 October–3
November 2001. At the session, member States pledged US$8.96 million
to fund new work designed to promote tropical forest conservation
and sustainable development, and the Council approved and financed a
number of projects. The Council also took decisions on:
strengthening forest law enforcement in member countries requesting
assistance; convening a workshop to further develop the draft
workplan for mangrove forest ecosystems; establishing a database of
statistics on the trade of bamboo and rattan; and assisting
countries to develop credible systems for auditing the
implementation of ITTO's criteria and indicators for SFM.
INTERSESSIONAL HIGHLIGHTS
INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON MANGROVES: The ITTO
convened an International Workshop on Mangroves in Cartagena de las
Indias, Colombia, from 19-22 February 2002. Participants recommended
that a Global Plan of Action for Mangroves be implemented, and
drafted a list of elements for such a plan, including aspects
related to: assessment and monitoring of mangrove resources;
conservation and management; socioeconomic benefits for local
communities; research; information and databases; institutions; and
policies and legislation. Participants also recommended that an
International Year of Mangroves be established through the UN
system.
SECOND SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS FORUM ON
FORESTS: The second session of the United Nations Forum on
Forests (UNFF) took place from 4-15 March 2002, in New York.
Delegates adopted a Ministerial Declaration and Message to the 2002
World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD), and eight decisions,
on: combating deforestation and forest degradation; forest
conservation and protection of unique types of forests and fragile
ecosystems; rehabilitation and conservation strategies for countries
with low forest cover; rehabilitation and restoration of degraded
lands and the promotion of natural and planted forests; concepts,
terminology and definitions; specific criteria for the review of the
effectiveness of the international arrangement on forests; proposed
revisions to the medium-term plan for 2002-2005; and other matters.
UNFF-2 was also mandated to establish terms of reference for three
ad hoc expert groups on: approaches and mechanisms for
monitoring, assessment and reporting; finance and transfer of
environmentally sound technologies; and consideration with a view to
recommending the parameters of a mandate for developing a legal
framework on all types of forests. However, delegates were not able
to reach agreement and instead took a procedural decision to forward
to UNFF-3 an entirely bracketed paper containing the draft terms of
reference.
INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON COMPARABILITY AND
EQUIVALENCE OF FOREST CERTIFICATION SCHEMES: This workshop was
convened in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, from 3-4 April 2002. The
workshop made several recommendations for ITTO action, including,
inter alia, to: provide support for capacity building to
producing member countries in forest certification; monitor progress
in comparability and equivalence of certification systems and
explore opportunities for promoting convergence in forest
certification standards in member countries, including regional
initiatives; facilitate discussion involving stakeholders and
provide support to exploring the feasibility of a phased approach to
certification as a means to improve equitable access to
certification by producers in producing and consuming member
countries; recognize the potential contribution of certification of
forest management and chain of custody to the control of illegal
logging and trade in tropical timber; support research to examine
the effectiveness and efficiency of alternative sets of indicators
for satisfying specific certification criteria and to clarify the
impact of certification on SFM; keep its members informed on
initiatives related to international frameworks for mutual
recognition between certification systems; and provide support to
regional certification fora and related organizations in tropical
regions.
SIXTH CONFERENCE OF PARTIES TO THE CONVENTION ON
BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY: The sixth Conference of Parties to the
Convention on Biological Diversity met from 7-19 April 2002 in The
Hague. Delegates adopted a Revised Work Programme on Forest
Biological Diversity, which includes goals, objectives and
activities grouped under three programme elements: conservation,
sustainable use and benefit-sharing; institutional and socioeconomic
enabling environment; and knowledge, assessment and monitoring.
Under "Conservation, Sustainable Use and
Benefit-sharing," the work programme calls for the development of
practical methods, guidelines, indicators and strategies to apply
the ecosystem approach. Regarding reducing threats and mitigating
threatening processes, the objectives focus on: alien invasive
species; pollution, climate change, fragmentation and conversion;
and forest fires and fire suppression. Regarding protection,
recovery and restoration of forest biodiversity, the objectives
address: degraded secondary forests and forests on former
forestlands, including plantations; forest management practices
furthering conservation of endemic and threatened species; and
protected forest area networks. To promote sustainable use of forest
biodiversity, the objectives address: losses caused by unsustainable
harvesting; indigenous and local communities regarding
community-management systems; and information systems and
strategies. On access and benefit-sharing, the objective is to
promote fair and equitable benefit-sharing.
To enhance the "Institutional and Socioeconomic
Enabling Environment," the objectives focus on: understanding
causes of forest biodiversity loss; integrating conservation and
sustainable use into forest and other sectoral policies and
programmes; developing good governance; and promoting forest law
enforcement and addressing related trade. The goal on socioeconomic
impacts seeks to mitigate failures and distortions leading to
biodiversity loss. Regarding increasing public education,
participation and awareness, the objective is to increase support
for and understanding of the value of forest biodiversity and its
goods and services.
Under "Knowledge, Assessment and Monitoring,"
the objectives on forest classification and assessment of status
and trends are to review and adopt a forest classification system,
and to develop forest ecosystem surveys. On improving knowledge on
and methods for assessment of status and trends, the objective is to
advance the development and implementation of criteria and
indicators. On improving the understanding of the role of forest
biodiversity and ecosystem functioning, the objective is to conduct
research programmes. Regarding improving data management for
monitoring and assessment, the objective is to enhance and improve
technical capacity.
TENTH MEETING OF THE INFORMAL ADVISORY GROUP
The Informal Advisory Group (IAG) of the ITTC
convened its tenth meeting on Sunday, 12 May, in Bali. At the
meeting, the IAG: noted the outcomes of the ITTO International
Workshop on the Comparability and Equivalence of Forest
Certification Schemes; underscored the strategic importance of
promoting cooperation and partnerships between the ITTO and
environmental NGOs and recommended that the Council take appropriate
action to facilitate the establishment of an Advisory Group for
environmental NGOs; and noted the work of the Expert Panel on the
Guidelines for Reforestation, Management and Rehabilitation of
Degraded and Secondary Forests and further discussed the Council�s
provisional adoption of the Guidelines and additional follow-up
work. On the frequency and duration of Council and Committee
sessions, the IAG, inter alia, noted the case for a single
annual session, and considered the desirability and appropriateness
of convening an inter-sessional working group to assist the Council
in its deliberations on this issue at its next session.
Regarding a new successor agreement to the ITTA,
1994, the IAG felt it could be useful to commence groundwork for
negotiating a new agreement, and recommended that a joint caucus
meeting discuss this issue. The IAG also highlighted the ITTO�s
contribution in the context of the UNFF and the Collaborative
Partnership on Forests (CPF), and suggested that the Council review
this matter at its next session. The IAG further recommended that
the Council consider a proposal to convene an ITTO satellite meeting
in conjunction with the WSSD, as well as the possibility of
conveying its own political message to the WSSD. Regarding an
initiative on forest law enforcement and governance (FLEG) being
undertaken in Brazzaville, the IAG recommended that the Council
consider co-sponsoring the initiative. The IAG also discussed the
feasibility of developing Criteria and Indicators for the
Sustainable Management of Mangrove Forests.
The IAG considered the possible list of decisions
to be considered and adopted by ITTC-32, on: projects, pre-projects
and activities; certification; organization of work of the Council
and Committees; enhancing cooperation with environmental NGOs and
civil society; Guidelines on Restoration, Management and
Rehabilitation of Degraded and Secondary Forests; evaluation/ review
of the utilization and impact of existing ITTO Guidelines;
preparatory work for a new agreement and the possibility of a
long-term strategic plan; the ITTO�s contribution to the WSSD; FLEG
in Africa; follow-up on the Congo Mission and Yaounde Summit - the
Congo Basin Initiative; and the Mangrove Workplan.
THINGS TO LOOK FOR TODAY
ITTC SESSIONS: The opening session of the
Council will commence at 10:00 am in the Nusantara Room. The Council
will continue to meet from 2:00-4:00 pm.
JOINT COMMITTEE SESSION: A Joint Committee
Session will be held from 4:00-4:30 pm in the Nusantara Room.
COMMITTEE SESSIONS: The Committee on Forest
Industry (CFI) will meet in the Nusantara Room, and the Committee on
Reforestation and Forest Management (CRF) will meet in Jakarta Room
B, both from 4:30-6:30 pm.
PRODUCER AND CONSUMER GROUP MEETINGS: The
Producer Group will meet in the Nusantara Room, and the Consumer
Group in Jakarta Room B, from 6:30-7:30 pm. |