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The Finnish Bioeconomy

The Finnish Bioeconomy. Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, Natural Resources Department Marja Kokkonen, Director Riga 28 September 2016. Bioeconomy is the solution. Bioeconomy : Sustainable use of biological natural resources to produce goods, energy, food and services Aims :

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The Finnish Bioeconomy

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  1. The Finnish Bioeconomy Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, Natural Resources Department Marja Kokkonen, Director Riga 28 September 2016

  2. Bioeconomy is the solution • Bioeconomy: • Sustainable use of biological natural resources to produce goods, energy, food and services • Aims: • Decrease dependency on fossil raw materials • Prevent deprivation of ecosystems • Promote economic development and create new jobs • Precondition: • Favourablegrowthenvironment / business environment, includingavailability of sustainablyproducedraw-materials • Introduction of new technologies, digitalisation and new business concepts

  3. Sources of the finnish bioeconomy Kuvat: MMM/Mavi

  4. Programme of Prime Minister Sipilä’s Government Five strategic priorities; Employment and competitiveness, Knowledge and education, Wellbeing and health, Bioeconomy and clean solutions, Digitalisation, experimentation and deregulation

  5. Implementation of the Government Programme • 26 key projects, a total of about 80 measures • Inputs allocated by the priorities: • Employment and competitiveness 170 million euros • Knowledge and education 300 million euros • Wellbeing and health 130 million euros • Bioeconomy and clean solutions 300 million euros • Digitalisation, experimentation and deregulation 100 million euros • In addition, reducing the repair debt of the transport network 600 million euros

  6. Bioeconomy and cleansolutions Government-term objectives for the strategic priorities • Finland has achieved the 2020 climate objectives already during the government term. Imported fossil fuel-based energy has been replaced by clean and renewable domestic energy. • Growth of cleantech enterprises, increase in the sustainable use of natural resources, pluriactive rural enterprises and efficient circular economy have contributed to the creation of new jobs, without compromising environmental protection. • Profitability of food production has improved and the trade balance has risen by 500 million euros. • Administrative burden which has slowed down renewal has been significantly reduced.

  7. Key project: Stimulating the supply of wood and new products fromforests

  8. Forests & forestry: some key figures ECONOMIC ASPECTS • 20.3 mill. ha of forests • Roundwood harvesting 65 mill.m3/a (incl. 9 mill.m3 of energy wood) • Stumpage earnings 2 billion €/a (30 €/m3) • Average net income 100 €/ha/a • 20 % of exports from forest products SOCIAL ASPECTS • Forest sector employment 65 000 • Multiple use, common right of access ECOLOGICAL ASPECTS • 36% of threatened species in mineral soil forests • 13% of forests for biodiversity conservation • Forests as a net sink: 20 - 40 million tn CO2-ekv

  9. Forestpolicyframework • National forest strategy 2025 and the Government´s Programme set key targets and actions for the forest policy. • We have a political will that the use of wood should be diversified and increased. We also have a political will that it will be done in a sustainable way. • Need for actions which will boost innovations, entrepreneurship, the growth of the forest sector and safeguarding biodiversity. KEY GOVERNMENT PROJECTS NFS IMPLIMENTATION AND OTHER PROJECTS BASED ON THE GOVERNMENT PROGRAMME BAU business as usual

  10. Forest policy tools Legislation e.g. Forest Act Strategies & programmes • Bioeconomy strategy • National Forest Strategy 2025 • Statutory forest regeneration • Conservation of small ecologically valuable habitats Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry Financial incentives Finnish Forestry Centre • Forest improvement • Biodiversity conservation Information and advice New technology: aerial laser image to measure forest stands • Publicly funded forest resource database • Forest management plans • Communication and education

  11. National forest strategy 2025 (NFS) background • A long tradition of Forest programmes; The first programmes was launched in the 60s, NFP in 1999 • Forest-based bioeconomy has been in the Finnish Forest Programme since 2008. • National Bioeconomy Strategy (2014) • The goal is to create new economic growth and jobs through new bio-based business (production and services) while securing ecosystem services. • Diverse role of forests in bioeconomy: substitution of fossil raw materials in products and energy, maintaining productive and healthy forest resources, carbon sequestration in wood. • Strategic outlines dealing with green bioeconomy were concretized in the National Forest Strategy 2025 • http://mmm.fi/en/nfs • NFS: prioritisation of objectives, specification of more detailed activities/project • Regional and rural point of view; Regional Forest Programmes

  12. Vision and strategicgoals of NFS 2025 2. FLEXIBLE, EFFECTIVE AND CUSTOMER-ORIENTED ADMINISTRATION 1. KNOW-HOW R&D 1. GROWTH, NEW AND INNOVATIVE BUSINESSES 1. FORESTRY IS ACTIVE AND BUSINESS-LIKE 2. PROCUREMENT OF RAW MATERIAL 2. BIODIVERSITY, ECOLOGICAL AND SOCIAL SUSTAINABILITY 3. EU AND INTERNATIONAL WORK

  13. Key indicators 2. - CUSTOMER SATISFACTION - AVAILABLE FOREST DATA, 1. - R&D FUNDING, - EMPLOYMENT 1. - TURNOVER - APPRECIATION - WOOD UTILISATION / APPRECIATION - SHARE OF WOOD BASED ENERGY 1. - AVERAGE SIZE OF FOREST STAND - PROFITABILITY (FORESTRY) - MANAGEMENT OF YOUNG STANDS 2. - GENUINE CHANGES IN CLASSIFICATIONS OF THREATENED FOREST SPECIES - CARBON SINK - VOLUME OF DEADWOOD IN FORESTS 2. - INCREMENT IN THE GROWING STOCK - HARVESTING VOLUMES - INFRASTRUCTURE FUNDING INVESTMENTS 3. - EU AND INTERNATIONAL WORK - EU FOREST STRATEGY - ENERGY AND CLIMATE - DEVELOPMENT CO-OPERATION

  14. Implementation; Strategic projects of NFS • Forest information and e-services of the future • Land use, planning and zoning in support of the forest sector • Statistics on the renewing forest sector • Taxation and legislation in support of active forest management, entry of timber to the market and development of forest ownership structure. • New incentive schemes and resource-efficient forest management • Research strategy for the forest sector • Transport infrastructure in support of the forest sector • New cooperation models between of working life and training and education • Nature management in commercial forests • Securing ecosystem services other than wood production and developing their markets • Appreciation of Finnish forests

  15. Implementation; Regional forest programs • Regional Forest Programme is a development plan concerning the entire forestry sector within different regions. • The programmeharmonises the requirements of economic, social and ecological sustainability. • The programmesarein line with NFS and corporate with other regional programmes (national and EU-financed) • The Finnish Forest Center is responsible of programs • Regional Forest councils are the participatory body • The national and regional activities/development are measured

  16. The Interactionbetween international, national and regionallevels An international level An international level A national level A national level A regionallevel A regionallevel

  17. Thank you!

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