1 / 24

Czech Republic Karel Vančura, Kateřina Trejbalova, Forestry Development Dept., Prague

Czech Republic Karel Vančura, Kateřina Trejbalova, Forestry Development Dept., Prague.

maya
Download Presentation

Czech Republic Karel Vančura, Kateřina Trejbalova, Forestry Development Dept., Prague

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Czech RepublicKarel Vančura, Kateřina Trejbalova, Forestry Development Dept., Prague Team of Specialists Meetingto monitor and develop assistance to countries of Central and Eastern Europe in transitionin the forest and forest products sector Warsaw, Poland, March 4, 2004

  2. CZECH REPUBLIC

  3. General background information Current status of the forest sector • Increasing area of forest land (2 643 058 ha - 34%) • Commercial forests - 76 % • Increasing growing stock volume (641 mil CuM) • Afforestation of agricultural land - 1 000 ha/year • Average rotation period – 115.4 years • Decreasing number of employees in forestry sector - currently 25 700 persons

  4. Forest conditionand main problems • forest (and biodiversity) losses due to theindustrial pollution (“Black Triangle”); • about 60% of forests are damaged on certain level; • still too high number of high deer (Cervideae) in forests. Animals’ browsing and peeling bark significantly affects the structure of species, ages, space and of course also biodiversity within forest stands; • change of forest tree species composition (current ratio of broadleaved /23%/ and coniferous is almost in opposite to the natural one /65%/; • 55% of forested area is artificially planted by Norway spruce); • increasing share of broadleaved from 12.9 % in 1950 to 22.3 % in 2000; • new problems following transformation period (mainly high number of new small forest owners).

  5. National Forest Inventory • The total forest area covering the territory of what is now the Czech Republic was for the first time surveyed in 1790 under the Joseph’s cadastre and amounted to 1,974,000 ha (which was 25 % of the total area). • Figures from 1839 reported already 2,267,000 ha. • Between 1920 and 1960 the forest area increased by about 10% and it is 2,643,058 ha at the present time (2002) • Contemporary National Forest Inventory started in the last year based on the governmental decision 193/2001 Coll. The Forest Management Institute (FMI), as a government organization established by the Ministry of Agriculture of the Czech Republic is responsible for performing of this task.

  6. Role of the Forestry Sector „forest has become the important factor of sociao-economic development of society“ GDP coming from forestry sector is relatively small – about 0.6 to 0.7 % NFP – cross sectoral matter, but involvement in forestry issues not too high Organizational changes – diminishing of forestry in the structure of the Ministry of Agriculture

  7. Ownership

  8. Changes in Forest Legislation • Forest Act No. 289/1995 Coll. • Game Management Act No. 449/2001 Coll. • Act on marketing of Forest Reproductive Material No. 149/2003 Coll. • Protection of Nature and Landscape Act No. 114/1992Coll. • New Forest Act ? – discussions should started in 2004

  9. Forest policy developments and related institutional changes • Conception of the state forestry policy (1994 and 2000); • Forest Act; • National Forestry Programme Institutional changes: • Forests of the Czech Republic, S. E. • Forestry research

  10. Institutional framework • Ministry of Agriculture - state administration in forestry • Forest Management Institute • Forestry and Game Management • Research Institute • Forests of the Czech Republic, • State Enterprise • Ministry of Environment

  11. Forests of the Czech Republic, S. E. Other organizations involved in forestry: National Parks, Protected Landscape AreasAdministrations, Nature and Landscape ProtectionAgency, Forestry Faculties of Universities, Association of Municipal andPrivate Forest Owners, Czech Forest Society etc.

  12. Forest policy developments and related institutional changes • International cooperation FORAFIN • Implication of the recent EU development - not easy situation on the market (drop in prices), - new regulations, Forest Focus, NATURA 2000

  13. EU Enlargement • General hope (not only in forestry) - changes in behavior of some institutions? • Not the same starting point: - historically given different level of regulation from the side of state (e. g. due to the nature protection etc.) - how to compensate forest owner struggling on the free market? - should be these conditions balanced somehow in the future? - should Community discussed such matter in spite of the „principle of subsidiarity“ approach?

  14. The main issues of the transitionprocess Arrangements of Rights in Property and Use • Restitution – Act No. 229/1991 Coll., • Claims for restitution 355 000 ha, • 1 800 cases for decision of law courts, • Forests of church (170 000 ha - 6% of total forest area).

  15. Transition in forestry, changes in forest ownership • central planning market-oriented approach; • economic and social spectrum effects of changes; • private-sector has 145,000 new forest owners; • small owners - 750,000 ha of forests, nearly 90 % have on average less than 2 hectares of forest land; • Transformation process: • restitution of forests to previous owners • creation of legal entity Forests of the Czech Republic • privatization of former enterprises through joint- • stock comp.

  16. Transition in forestry, changes in forest ownership Problems of small owners: i) have no idea on how to manage forest; ii) live in the town far away from their holdings; iii) are already old and become the victims of dishonest, profit-seeking people who offer them providing of services or a purchase of their forest holdings. The smallest holdings are not usually managed in proper way because of low skills, knowledge and sometimes also zero interest of the owners.

  17. Forestry strategy, policy, programmes Basic principles of current Forest Policy • completion of restitution process; • improvement of forest ecosystems; • conservation and enhancement of biodiversity; • development of non-timber functions of forests; • better utilization of timber; • promotion of forestry institutions; • pursuit of economic aspects of forestry policy; • utilization of National Forest Program.

  18. National Forest Program National Forestry Programme as a Professional Response to the Ideas from Strasbourg, Rio and Helsinki .... Foresters have to attempt to join all forces in order to formulate the problem of forestry as a strategic problem important for the whole society. Foresters have to assume the vast task of elaborating a concise national forestry programme as a general project with unified coordination and aiming at unified, clearly defined financing. This programme has to be directed at the solution of carefully selected high-priority problems of contemporary forestry as a newly conceived sector based on the principle of sustainable, functionally integrated management in all forests irrespective of proprietorship boundaries. Sustainable Forest Management in the Czech Republic, Prague 1993

  19. National Forest Program • The basic principle from which the Czech National Forest Programme proceeds is the management of forests in a permanently sustainable manner; • Increasing the responsibility of forest owners for their property. • The NFP is supposed to be an interdepartmental and inter-sectoral programme - emphasizing the place of forests in the environment and landscape creation, non-production functions of forests, the importance of the forest as a renewable source of raw material.

  20. Areas where improvements are needed • restitution and privatization; • fragmentation of forest land; • improvement of forest legislation; • improvement of forest conditions; • education, awareness and public relations; • lack of general public involvement in forestry; • state supervising role during the transition period; • international commitments; • gaps in collaboration.

  21. Future challenges to ensure sustainable forest management • National Forest Programme • Improvement of public awareness on forestry • More meaningful projection of the importance of forests into the national economy • Forestry image improvement, P. R. • Valuation of non-wood benefits and services • Support to private forest owners

  22. Implementation of the Resolution H3of the MCPFE • Assistance to the Czech Republic in the 90ties Switzerland, Canada, the Netherlands, GEF World Bank • Beginning of the 3rd millennium: Czech Republic as donor country Morocco, Chile, Ecuador, Colombia, Russia Priority areas: Bosnia and Herzegovina, China, Ukraine, Yemen, Serbia and Montenegro, Zambia

  23. Opinion on the future of the UNECE/FAO ToS on CITs • Cooperation, particularly partnership is needed • Promotion of forests, fundraising • ToR • Support of private forestry, • Improvement of forestry and environmental legislation, • Education on various levels, • Improvement of valuation of non-wood benefits and services offered by forests, • Participatory approach, better communication between various stakeholders and institutions.

  24. Thank you for your attention Karel Vancura Forestry Development Department vancura@mze.cz

More Related