Publikationen (FIS)

The Dilemma of Maintaining Intact Forest Through Certification

authored by
Fritz Kleinschroth, Tim Rayden, Jaboury Ghazoul
Abstract

Intact forests are natural and often extensive forests free from apparent anthropogenic degradation. Intact forests have important intrinsic and societal values, making their protection a high conservation priority. They are, however, vulnerable to being lost and degraded due to high opportunity costs and a lack of positive incentives to their preservation. Market-based mechanisms, such as voluntary certification, might provide a means to conserve intact forests while maintaining income through sustainable forest uses. Yet possibilities to ensure strict protection of large areas of intact forests through certification remain limited as long as premiums from certification are bound to the units of forest products that are sold. We explore challenges for incorporating intact forests into certification processes, and of maintaining intact forests within forest management units. To circumvent these challenges, it might be necessary to create a form of compensation payment scheme to overcome the foregone costs of intact forest preservation. Alternatively, certification systems might need to consider permitting some degree of regulated extraction in exchange for recognition and implementation of stringent forest preservation. This will require a re-evaluation of the way intactness is treated within current certification standards and the requirements for forestry within intact forests. Eventually, intact forest conservation and socially and economically viable forest management can only be reconciled on the landscape scale.

External Organisation(s)
ETH Zurich
Wildlife Conservation Society
University of Edinburgh
Utrecht University
Type
Article
Journal
Frontiers in Forests and Global Change
Volume
2
Publication date
15.11.2019
Publication status
Published
Peer reviewed
Yes
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Forestry, Ecology, Global and Planetary Change, Nature and Landscape Conservation, Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG 15 - Life on Land
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.3389/ffgc.2019.00072 (Access: Open)