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Bonjour, pour tous ceux que �a int�resse, voici une info sur l��tat des
for�ts mondiales. Amiti�s. Bernard Blanc 


Subject: [alert] State of the World's Forests 1999
Date: 6 Mar 99 11:59:30 CST
From: Erin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From: Erin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

ROME, Italy, March 4, 1999 (ENS) - A forested area about one-quarter
the size of Italy is lost throughout the world each year, according to
the just released edition of the United Nations Food & Agriculture
Organization's (FAO) biannual review State of the World's Forests
1999. The 11 million hectares (42,460 square miles) of forest lands
lost fall to insect pests and diseases, fire, overharvesting of
industrial wood and fuelwood, poor harvesting practices, overgrazing
and air pollution, according to the report.

Between 1990 and 1995, the total area of forests decreased by more
than 56 million hectares (216,000 square miles), an area roughly twice
the size of Italy.

While developed countries actually saw a net increase of almost nine
million hectares (35,000 square miles) of forested lands, developing
countries posted a loss of over 65 million hectares (251,000 square
miles).

Now countries are taking action to limit forest losses, the State of
the World's Forests 1999 report says.

The findings of State of the World's Forests (SOFO 1999) are being
discussed by heads of forest services, senior government officals,
representatives of international organizations and non-governmental
groups participating at the 14th Session of FAO's Committee on
Forestry in Rome all this week.

"SOFO will help facilitate informed discussion and decision-making,"
according to M. Hosny El-Lakany, assistant director-general of FAO's
Forestry Department. The Committee on Forestry meets every two years
to discuss emerging forestry issues, seek solutions and advise on
appropriate action.

Extraordinary events in 1997 and 1998 caused the period to be one of
the bleakest for the world's forests. New insect pest and disease
outbreaks were reported in many regions of the world, the United
States and Canada were hit by crippling ice storms, and dramatic
wildfires affected forests everywhere.

"Nearly all types of forest burned in 1997-1998, even some tropical
rain forests which had not burned in recent memory," according to the
report.

Unusually large fires in Indonesia, the Amazon and Mexico increased
public awareness of these national disasters. Droughts associated with
the El Ni�o were largely to blame, turning moist forests into
tinder-boxes of forest vegetation, but, according to SOFO, many of
these great fires were "predominantly man-made."

These events have spurred the international community to take more
active measures to halt the spread of deforestation. Many countries
have recently introduced new logging regulations, adopted more
enlightened management practices, and improved recycling and
manufacturing efficiencies in wood processing, for example.

Countries are increasingly designating large tracts of forest as
strict conservation areas.

The Philippines, for example, recently banned all logging in
old-growth and virgin forests and placed these forests under a
national protected area system.

In China, a similar ban on timber harvesting in natural forests was
imposed in July 1998.

In Suriname, 1.5 million hectares (5,790 square miles) of natural
forest, one-tenth of the country's total land area, was set aside as a
wilderness reserve in 1998.

Brazil, Cambodia, New Zealand, Sri Lanka, Thailand and the United
States, among others, have also recently either banned or severely
restricted timber harvesting in primary forests, the FAO State of the
Forests report found.

FAO Director-General Jacques Diouf has convened a Ministerial Meeting
on sustainability issues in forestry, both national and international
perspectives, for March 8 and 9 at FAO headquarters here. Topics on
the agenda include international agreements to support sustainable
forest develoment and global action to address forest fires.

The ministers will also consider the observations and recommendations
of the 14th session of COFO on the proposed FAO Strategic Framework
for the years 2000 to 2015.

"State of the World's Forests 1999" is available from the FAO Sales
and Marketing Group, Viale delle Terme di Caracalla, 00100 Rome,
Italy, or Email: [23][EMAIL PROTECTED]

� [24]Environment News Service (ENS) 1999. All Rights Reserved.
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