Dear IUFRO Meliaceae E-list:
Below is IUFRO Spotlight #80. Other Spotlights can be found at:
http://www.iufro.org/media/iufro-spotlights/
Regards,
Sheila Ward
Deputy Coordinator
IUFRO WP 1.02.04
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: IUFRO Headquarters <office(a)iufro.org>
Date: Thu, Jul 30, 2020 at 11:21 AM
Subject: IUFRO Spotlight #80 - Becoming visible – non-timber forest
products and a sustainable economy
To: Dear IUFRO Officeholder <mahoganyforthefuture(a)gmail.com>
[image: IUFRO Spotlight]
IUFRO Spotlight #80 - Becoming visible – non-timber forest products and a
sustainable economy
*IUFRO Spotlight is an initiative of the International Union of Forest
Research Organizations. Its aim is to introduce, in a timely fashion,
significant findings in forest research from IUFRO officeholders and member
organizations to a worldwide network of decision makers, policy makers and
researchers. IUFRO will encapsulate, and distribute in plain language,
brief, topical and policy-relevant highlights of those findings, along with
information on where/how to access the full documents.*
*Occasionally, IUFRO Spotlight also presents special activities such as
sessions at major IUFRO congresses or the work of the IUFRO Task Forces.
These focus on emerging key issues that contribute to international
processes and activities and are of great interest to policy makers and to
groups inside and outside the forest sector. With those criteria in mind,
the Spotlights for the next several months will highlight the undertakings
and goals of the IUFRO Task Forces. The IUFRO Spotlights will be
distributed in a periodic series of emails as well as blog postings.*
Becoming visible – non-timber forest products and a sustainable economy
PDF for download
<https://www.iufro.org/fileadmin/material/publications/spotlights/spotlight80-task-force-bioeconomy-ntfp.pdf>
[image: Photo showing leaves of Cinnamomu tamala, traded in thousands of
tonnes. Photo by Carsten Smith Hall.]
Becoming visible - here leaves of Cinnamomum tamala, traded in thousands of
tonnes. Photo by Carsten Smith-Hall.
One positive and largely overlooked outcome of the current coronavirus
could be a stronger bioeconomy.
"I think the pandemic is going to spur the bioeconomy," said Dr. James
Chamberlain of the United States Forest Service, Southern Research Station
in Blacksburg, Virginia, and Coordinator of IUFRO's *Unlocking the
Bioeconomy and Non-Timber Forest Products *Task Force.
"I've seen evidence that use of fossil fuels declined significantly during
the pandemic. The BBC reported on June 10 that Britain had gone coal-free
for two months, replacing production with wood pellets. Interest in
renewable energy is growing rapidly, and the marginal costs of switching to
renewable energy are making alternative energy attractive. The bioeconomy
is emerging as a major strategic economic movement of the 21st Century.
"People are eating better and demanding healthy and nutritious foods, in
part because of the pandemic. And we're not eating out as much. We're
cooking in. This will drive demand for forest foods that contribute to a
bioeconomy," he added.
The bioeconomy is a relatively new model for industry and the economy that
involves using renewable biological resources sustainably to produce food,
energy and other goods.
It has been described as knowledge-based production and use of biological
resources to provide products, processes and services in all sectors within
the frame of a sustainable economic system.
Transition to a bioeconomy is expected to reduce fossil fuel dependency and
contribute to climate and environmental protection.
Dr. Carsten Smith-Hall of the University of Copenhagen, Department of Food
and Resource Economics, and Deputy Coordinator of the Task Force concurs.
"A bioeconomy approach," he says, "offers an opportunity to refocus and
strengthen efforts to achieve sustainable management of renewable natural
resources, including forests. What works locally and how can that be scaled
up?"
The impetus for the bioeconomy movement was biotechnology oriented –
contributing to replacing fossil fuels with biofuels. By pointing to shea
nuts in Burkina Faso and medicinal plants in Nepal as examples, he
maintains that non-timber forest products (NTFPs) can become a major
component in local, and even national, economies, provided supporting
legislative and socio-economic environments are created.
The Task Force – one of nine IUFRO Task Forces – is investigating whether
and how non-timber forest products have been integrated into global and
national efforts to transition to and expand the bioeconomy, and how such
efforts can be supported.
"Now is the time to highlight the science-based knowledge from around the
world to explore how to integrate these important products into full
valuation of forests to facilitate sustainable management," Dr. Smith-Hall
said.
[image: Photo showing Big business - here dried medicinal plants on the way
to industries in Nepal. Photo by Carsten Smith-Hall]
Big business - here dried medicinal plants on the way to industries in
India. Photo by Carsten Smith-Hall
"It also provides us with the opportunity to rethink bioeconomic
approaches," he added. "In particular on how to refocus from
biotechnological thinking that originated in the global north to
sustainable management of global resources."
Dr. Chamberlain noted: "A large vocal part of global society recognizes
that we cannot do business as we have been doing for a long, long time. We
need a new economic model that embraces sustainable sourcing of raw
materials, including all forest products.
"Climate change is certainly a major driving force behind the push to
eliminate fossil fuels to support a bioeconomy. But there is much more to
the emergence of the bioeconomy than that: consumers want their products to
be sustainably sourced, socially fairly procured, and benefits equitably
distributed."
"The study and exploration of the bioeconomy relative to non-timber forest
products is in its infancy," he said. "We hope to address questions such as
how can we integrate NTFPs into a bioeconomy and what are feasible and
realistic pathways to the bioeconomy?"
The Task Force is using a three-pronged approach to the issue:
- *Theoretical*: defining and characterizing the role of NTFPs in
transitioning to a bioeconomy;
- *Empirical*: analyzing how and to what extent NTFPs promote
sustainable resource use, generate employment and contribute to food and
livelihood security and poverty alleviation; and
- *Practical*: developing monitoring approaches and identifying
interventions and policies to support the integration of NTFPs into
bioeconomy strategies, including national reporting schemes.
Task Force outputs aim to support the integration of non-timber forest
products into bioeconomic approaches worldwide.
Additionally, the Task Force members want to see the people, industry and
resource base affected by the management of non-timber forest products
fully integrated into transition pathways to a bioeconomy.
*Find out more about the IUFRO Task Force on Unlocking the Bioeconomy and
Non-Timber Forest Products:*
*https://www.iufro.org/science/task-forces/bioeconomy-and-non-timber-forest-products/*
<https://www.iufro.org/science/task-forces/bioeconomy-and-non-timber-forest-products/>
*The IUFRO Task Forces are established on a temporary basis during each
5-year IUFRO Board term and focus on emerging key forest-related issues.
The nine current TFs will run till 2024 at which time their relevance will
be assessed in relation to the forest issues of the day.*
*________________________________*
The findings reported in *IUFRO Spotlight* are submitted by IUFRO
officeholders and member organizations. IUFRO is pleased to highlight and
circulate these findings to a broad audience but, in doing so, acts only as
a conduit. The quality and accuracy of the reports are the responsibility
of the member organization and the authors.
Suggestions for reports and findings that could be promoted through *IUFRO
Spotlight* are encouraged. To be considered, reports should be fresh, have
policy implications and be applicable to more than one country. If you
would like to have a publication highlighted by Spotlight, contact: Gerda
Wolfrum,
wolfrum(at)iufro.org <wolfrum(a)iufro.org>.
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:
https://www.iufro.org/
*________________________________*
*IUFRO Spotlight #80, published in July 2020*
*by IUFRO Headquarters, Marxergasse 2, 1030 Vienna, Austria. Available for
download at: **https://www.iufro.org/media/iufro-spotlights/
<https://www.iufro.org/media/iufro-spotlights/>*
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