Mexico’s First Wood Fiberboard Plant Highlights Controversy Over UN FAO Definition of Forests
The role natural forests and commercial plantations play in addressing climate change and promoting sustainable development continues to be a controversial, at times hotly debated, issue among policy makers, timber and construction industry players, environmental groups, and local communities.
Mexico President Enrique Peña Nieto highlighted his government’s commitment to development of commercial forest areas in a speech reinforcing Mexico’s commitment to climate change mitigation and adaptation. “For many years, we maintained the paradigm, the model, the stereotype that it was unthinkable to exploit our forest areas when it is, in fact, possible,” the president said.
Timber, industrial forestry and climate change
Peña Nieto pointed to Canada and Finland as examples of countries where it has been shown that commercial forest plantations can be commercially successful while at the same time contributing to the achievement of national and international greenhouse gas emissions reductions goals and promoting sustainable development.
“It is possible to reforest and use forest areas,” Peña Nieto was quoted. “It is possible to exploit our forests while ensuring the care, reforestation and preservation of our forests, as well as achieving a commercial goal.”
The president gave his speech September 23 for the inauguration of a $12 million medium density fiberboard production facility owned by Proteak Uno, Mexico’s largest commercial forestry company. Located in Uuimanguillo in the southern state of Tabasco, the facility uses the latest technology, some from Finland, to produce as much as 280,000 cubic meters per year of medium density fiberboard.
Sustainable forestry in Mexico
Mexico imports nearly all the wood board used for construction in the country. Proteak Uno is the first company to produce medium density fiberboard at large scale domestically. The lumber is sold under the brand name Technotabla.
Finnish overseas development bank FinnFund invested $12 million in Proteak Uno’s facility. “MDF board made in Mexico is also an ecological choice,” Finnfund highlights in a news report.
“Raw material for the plant is produced locally, utilizing sustainably managed eucalyptus forests. Proteak owns currently some 10,000 hectares of forest land, which will be enough to supply the plant.”
Others disagree, asserting that commercial forest plantations are wiping out grasslands and other types of ecosystems and disrupting and uprooting native communities for the benefit of large timber corporations and international investment groups.
What is a forest?
Thousands took to the streets of Durban, South Africa last year during the World Forestry Congress in protest of the way the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) defines forests. Having delivered a petition of protest with more than 100,000 signatures, the FAO responded to organizers by downplaying the impact and importance of their definition.
Though it may initially appear to be a minor, insignificant issue, environmental NGOs, such as Plantnet, Salva La Selva, Timberwatch and World Rainforest Movement, explain the far-reaching, and negative, ramifications of what they assert its unduly simple, “one size fits all” definition of what constitutes a forest. As they explain, the FAO defines a forest in perhaps the simplest terms as any area of land within with a certain density of trees.
That means that commercial tree plantations, which are typically made up entirely of non-native eucalyptus alien and inhospitable to local flora and fauna and consume lots of water, are counted as forests by the FAO and key UN environmental governance agreements, such as REDD, the Convention on Biological Diversity, the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and its new strategic agenda, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Continuing to organize local and international support and lobby the FAO to change its definition of forests, the environmental NGOs declared September 21 as the International Day of Struggle Against Tree Plantations. They also sent an open letter to the FAO.
“Through this Open Letter, we assert that the FAO forest definition is responsible for many problems in respect of forest loss, land degradation and associated harmful impacts on forest and grassland dependent local communities.
“We therefore insist that the leadership of the FAO must assume full responsibility and immediately implement a genuinely independent and open process to revise its terminology and definitions for forests and tree plantations. The goal of achieving this FAO-directed action will inspire us to redouble our efforts!”
*Image credits: 1) FinnFund; 2) Mexico News Daily; 3) Proteak Uno
The post Mexico’s First Wood Fiberboard Plant Highlights Controversy Over UN FAO Definition of Forests appeared first on Global Warming is Real.
Source: http://globalwarmingisreal.com/2016/09/27/mexicos-first-wood-fiberboard-plant-highlights-controversy-over-un-fao-definition-of-forests/
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