Dear IUFRO Meliaceae Working party:
Below is IUFRO Spotlight #56. Other Spotlights can be found at:
http://www.iufro.org/media/iufro-spotlights/
Regards,
Sheila Ward
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: IUFRO Headquarters <office(a)iufro.org>
Date: Wed, Sep 13, 2017 at 3:58 AM
Subject: IUFRO Anniversary Congress Spotlight #56: Environment vs. economy:
Mapping the forest environmental frontier
To: Dear IUFRO Officeholder <mahoganyforthefuture(a)gmail.com>
[image: IUFRO Spotlight]
IUFRO Anniversary Congress Spotlight #56: Environment vs. economy:
Mapping the forest environmental frontier
*The 125th Anniversary Congress on 18-22 September 2017 in Freiburg,
Germany, will offer a wide selection of scientific sessions highlighting
innovative research and interdisciplinary research approaches of relevance
to forests, and focus on the transfer of scientific knowledge on critical
global forest-related challenges to national and international political
agendas. In a series of "Congress Spotlight" articles individual sessions
shall be showcased to give a foretaste of the richness and scope of
research findings that will be presented at the Congress. Keep updated at:
http://iufro2017.com/ <http://iufro2017.com/>*
*Environment vs. economy: Mapping the forest environmental frontier*
PDF for download
<https://www.iufro.org/download/file/27369/6539/anniversary-congress-spotlight56-forest-frontier-d9_pdf/>
<http://www.iufro.org/index.php?eID=tx_cms_showpic&file=18640&md5=4e8ea67d34d2bbd57bd65072f9c30483e0adad1f¶meters%5B0%5D=YTo0OntzOjU6IndpZHRoIjtzOjQ6IjgwMG0iO3M6NjoiaGVpZ2h0IjtzOjQ6IjYw¶meters%5B1%5D=MG0iO3M6NzoiYm9keVRhZyI7czoyMjoiPGJvZHkgYmdjb2xvcj0iYmxhY2siPiI7¶meters%5B2%5D=czo0OiJ3cmFwIjtzOjM3OiI8YSBocmVmPSJqYXZhc2NyaXB0OmNsb3NlKCk7Ij4g¶meters%5B3%5D=fCA8L2E%2BIjt9>
*Photo by Geoff Roberts, Australia*
To some, the forests mean combatting illegal logging and associated trade,
avoiding deforestation and degradation, conserving biodiversity and
protecting wilderness.
To others, the forests mean timber as a renewable raw material for uses
such as construction and bioenergy, forest-based climate change adaptation
and mitigation and transitioning toward a forest-based bioeconomy.
"These issues can be termed the global forest environmental frontier," said
Dr. Georg Winkel, Head of the European Forest Institute's Resilience
Research Programme in Bonn, Germany.
"All the issues are interrelated and relate to a global controversy that
asks how we can keep and manage the world's forests to satisfy both
ecological and socio-economic needs now and in the future," he said.
Dr. Winkel is coordinator of a session entitled *The Global Forest
Environmental Frontier – What has changed, what has remained unchanged, how
will the future look?* at the IUFRO 125th Anniversary Congress in Freiburg,
Germany in September.
Forests mean many different things to many different people and are managed
for many, often conflicting, societal needs and claims, he said.
"At the core, however, the questions are: what role do forests play as a
natural resource? What are the current and future prospects? And how has
the environmental debate relating to forests and forestry evolved in the
last decades and in different regions of the world?
"It's a debate that involves different scientific disciplines, policy
sectors, political-administrative settings, societal groups and economic
players in a variety of regional settings," he said.
In terms of discourse analysis, delineating the frontier has, in his
opinion, become more complex since the 1980s when, in several forest
regions across the planet, to talk about the frontier would have meant
talking about open conflict between the forest sector and environmental
groups.
While this has not entirely gone away, Dr. Winkel said the debate today is
much more multi-faceted and much less 'black and white'.
"Take the issue of the forest-based bioeconomy. Many see this as part of a
solution for critical environmental problems such as climate change
mitigation," he said. "At the same time, the bioeconomy is still about
harvesting wood that can have significant trade-offs with ecological
aspects, as an example, biodiversity conservation."
Elaborating on this evolution of the frontier, its shifting boundaries and
finding common denominators for the changes, will be at the heart of his
Congress session.
While he finds it difficult to have a clear vision of what, in terms of the
frontier, will transpire in the future, he sees at least three possible
scenarios.
"These are only possible options," he cautions. "They're not built on
any
substantial data; simply looking at current debates and developments.
They're just three possible ways of thinking about what might happen."
- The frontier built upon fundamentally different human values and
interests towards forests will persist, but the topics and venues will
change over the years. This, he went on to say, is what we've seen over the
last decades;
- The frontier will disperse and get permeable as socio-economic
interests and environmental beliefs become less and less divisible. This,
he said, refers to the necessity to integrate environmental values in
sustainable business development. For instance, a forest bioeconomy needs
to be sustainable and must have a social license to operate. There could be
increasing pressure to demonstrably integrate environmental values in
forest products and ecosystem services value chains and thus be seen as a
sustainable business as the economy transforms away from non-renewable
resources.
- The frontier will fade away because either the environmental beliefs
will vanish or, through technological change, the necessity to use forest
biomass will decrease. This scenario is the 'wild card' option.
"It's
really hypothetical," Dr. Winkel said. "Societal values always change. No
one can really know how these values will develop in the future. As for the
possibility of technological change, again it's totally hypothetical and
assumes a major unforeseeable change that shifts demand – something like
coal replacing wood as an energy source in the 18th-19th centuries.
"It will be quite interesting," he concludes, "to see how our presenters
evaluate the future of the frontier at the Congress in Freiburg."
*________________________________*
*The September 18-22 Congress in Freiburg will celebrate IUFRO's 125th
anniversary. Founded in 1892 in Eberswalde Germany, IUFRO has grown to
unite more than 15,000 scientists (who cooperate in IUFRO on a voluntary
basis) in almost 700 member organizations in more than 120 countries.IUFRO
promotes global cooperation in forest-related research and enhances the
understanding of the ecological, economic and social aspects of forests and
trees. It disseminates scientific knowledge to stakeholders and
decision-makers and contributes to forest policy and on-the-ground forest
management.About 2000 scientists from 89 countries are expected to attend
the Congress. The Forest Environmental Frontier session in Freiburg will be
one of 172 scientific sessions that will cover a wide array of topics
dealing with various aspects of forest research.See you at the IUFRO 125th
Anniversary Congress in Freiburg, Germany!Look out for #IUFRO2017
<https://twitter.com/hashtag/iufro2017?f=tweets&vertical=default&src=hash>
on Twitter and @iufro2017 <https://www.facebook.com/iufro2017> on Facebook!*
*________________________________*
The International Union of Forest Research Organizations (IUFRO) is the
only worldwide organization devoted to forest research and related
sciences. Its members are research institutions, universities, and
individual scientists as well as decision-making authorities and other
stakeholders with a focus on forests and trees.
Visit:
http://www.iufro.org/
*________________________________*
*IUFRO 125th Anniversary Congress Spotlight #56, published in September
2017by IUFRO Headquarters, Vienna, Austria.Available for download at:
**http://www.iufro.org/media/iufro-spotlights/
<http://www.iufro.org/media/iufro-spotlights/>*
*Contact the editor at
office(at)iufro.org <office(a)iufro.org> or visit
http://www.iufro.org/ <http://www.iufro.org/index.php?id=104>*
If you do not wish to receive *IUFRO Spotlight* publications, please email
us at:
office(at)iufro.org <office(a)iufro.org>
*Imprint:
http://www.iufro.org/legal/#c18944
<http://www.iufro.org/legal/#c18944>*