New York, United States —
Forest ministers from around the world will gather today to discuss the future of the forests at the start of the Fifth Conference of the United Nations Forum on Forests (UNFF) at the UN's headquarters in New York. Greenpeace is calling on governments to bring an end to the UNFF talk-shop which to date has done nothing to protect the forests nor the communities or the biodiversity that they house and create a legally binding agreement that will ensure the protection of the world's last remaining ancient forests.
Since the UN Summit on Environment and Development in Rio in 1992, the
loss of the world's last ancient forests continues at alarming rates.
During the last 13 years the world lost an area of forest greater than
the size of France, Spain, Sweden and Germany combined. The many
international meetings by governments to address this issue, including
the UNFF, have so far proved to be ineffective, unproductive and a
major financial drain of public money.
Greenpeace is urging the international community to focus their efforts
instead on the adoption of a legally binding Protocol on forests under
the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), which has a much stronger
track record in making agreements that are in the interests of local
communities, indigenous peoples and biodiversity. This agreement should
establish measures that will help governments achieve the global goal
set by the World Summit on Sustainable Development 10 years after Rio
to reduce and halt the loss of forest biodiversity by 2010, by
facilitating new money to fund forest conservation and ecologically
responsible forest management as well as regulating the uncontrolled
international timber trade.
The last ancient forests in both the North and the South, contain over
two third of the world's terrestrial biodiversity. Biodiversity
loss is a global concern, which requires global action. International
trade from producer to consumer regions is a key factor causing this
forest crisis. A strong, effective, fair and legally binding
multilateral environmental agreement is essential to help address this
problem.
"The current crisis facing the world's ancient forests, such as
accelerating rates of species loss and deforestation, requires
immediate attention and strong political will to shift the devastating
trend," said Martin Kaiser, Greenpeace International Forests
Campaigner. "Forest dependent peoples do not need any more
recycling of "nice" words on 'UN paper'. World leaders need to take
their cue from the Kyoto Protocol and create a similar legally binding
agreement for the last Ancient Forests."