| Literature DB >> 29785612 |
Mats Eriksson1, Lotta Samuelson1, Linnéa Jägrud2, Eskil Mattsson3, Thorsten Celander2, Anders Malmer4, Klas Bengtsson5, Olof Johansson6, Nicolai Schaaf1, Ola Svending7, Anna Tengberg1.
Abstract
A growing world population and rapid expansion of cities increase the pressure on basic resources such as water, food and energy. To safeguard the provision of these resources, restoration and sustainable management of landscapes is pivotal, including sustainable forest and water management. Sustainable forest management includes forest conservation, restoration, forestry and agroforestry practices. Interlinkages between forests and water are fundamental to moderate water budgets, stabilize runoff, reduce erosion and improve biodiversity and water quality. Sweden has gained substantial experience in sustainable forest management in the past century. Through significant restoration efforts, a largely depleted Swedish forest has transformed into a well-managed production forest within a century, leading to sustainable economic growth through the provision of forest products. More recently, ecosystem services are also included in management decisions. Such a transformation depends on broad stakeholder dialog, combined with an enabling institutional and policy environment. Based on seminars and workshops with a wide range of key stakeholders managing Sweden's forests and waters, this article draws lessons from the history of forest management in Sweden. These lessons are particularly relevant for countries in the Global South that currently experience similar challenges in forest and landscape management. The authors argue that an integrated landscape approach involving a broad array of sectors and stakeholders is needed to achieve sustainable forest and water management. Sustainable landscape management-integrating water, agriculture and forests-is imperative to achieving resilient socio-economic systems and landscapes.Entities:
Keywords: Forest institutions; Integrated landscape approach; Landscape restoration; Resilience; Sustainable forest management; Swedish forest history; Watershed management
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29785612 PMCID: PMC5999132 DOI: 10.1007/s00267-018-1066-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Manage ISSN: 0364-152X Impact factor: 3.266
Agencies consulted in the process being part of fact finding for this article (n = 42)
| Organization | Official website |
|---|---|
| Government Agencies | |
| Ministry of the Environment and Energy |
|
| Ministry of Enterprise and Innovation |
|
| Swedish Environmental Protection Agency |
|
| Swedish Forest Agency |
|
| Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA) |
|
| Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute (SMHI) |
|
| Swedish Museum of Natural History |
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| International organizations | |
| Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, FAO |
|
| Forest Trends |
|
| Certification organization | |
| Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) Sweden |
|
| Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC) |
|
| NGOs/charities | |
| CDP (Carbon Disclosure Project) |
|
| Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI) |
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| Swedish Society for Nature Conservation |
|
| Vi Agroforestry |
|
| World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) International |
|
| Religious organizations | |
| Church of Sweden |
|
| Universities/Research organizations | |
| Centre for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) |
|
| Forest, Climate and Livelihood Research Network at Chalmers University of Technology (Focali) |
|
| Forest, Climate and Livelihood Research Network at Chalmers University of Technology (Focali) |
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| Gothenburg University |
|
| IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute |
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| KTH Royal Institute of Technology |
|
| Linköping University |
|
| Secretariat for International Forestry Issues (SIFI) |
|
| Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI) |
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| Stockholm Resilience Centre (SRC) |
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| Skogforsk (the Forestry Research Institute of Sweden) |
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| Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Global Programme |
|
| World Resources Institute |
|
| Producers/businesses | |
| Ekebo Forest Management AB | |
| Hamra Gård Consultancy | |
| LRF Forestry (The Federation of Swedish Family Forest Owners) |
|
| NIRAS Consulting company |
|
| Nkoola Agencies International Ltd |
|
| Sense Group AB | |
| SSC Forestry |
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| Stora Enso AB |
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| Swedish Forest Industries Federation |
|
| Sveaskog AB |
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| Södra (Sodra) |
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| TetraPak AB |
|
Fig. 1Trend for total standing volume in Swedish forests since 1920s (moving 5-year average). All land-use classes except protected land, high mountains and urban areas are presented. Adapted from the Swedish Forest Agency (2014)
Fig. 2Productive forest land by owners classes in 2012. Adapted from Swedish Forest Agency (2014)
Fig. 3Small-holder land owners and their children replanting a clear-cut area in 1903, Storuman, Sweden. Source: Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Archive
Swedish competences of special relevance for restoring sustainable forest landscapes, identified in discussions with the government agencies listed in Table 1
| Competence | Indicative key stakeholder |
|---|---|
| 1. Governance | |
| Broad stakeholder participation in development and implementation of forest policies | Ministry of Rural Affairs, Ministry of Environment and Energy, Ministry of Enterprise and Innovation, forest and environment government agencies, water authorities, forestry industry, forest owner associations, universities of natural and social science, civil and environmental NGOs, religious and indigenous groups |
| Production and environmental objectives in Swedish Forest Policy | Ministry of Rural Affairs, Ministry of Environment and Energy, Ministry of Enterprise and Innovation, forest and environment government agencies, water authorities |
| Linking science with practice | Universities of natural and social science, technological institutes, forest smallholders, associations, forestry industries, forest and environment government agencies, water authorities, civil and environmental NGOs, religious and indigenous groups |
| Capacity building in policy development and development of best management practices | Forest and environment government agencies, universities and scientific institutions, forestry industries, forest farmers associations, civil society and environmental NGOs, religious and indigenous groups |
| 2. A prosperous forestry industry | |
| Product development and marketing of wood products | Forest technology and processing companies and entrepreneurs, trade associations, universities and knowledge institutions, designers, trade and investment councils |
| Cost-efficient and safe logging systems adapted for industry and small-scale businesses | Work environment authorities, forest technology entrepreneurs, forestry research institutes |
| Technology for competitive small- and medium-size mechanical wood industries | Forest technology entrepreneurs and industries, forest smallholder associations, designers |
| Technical tools and information technology (IT) solutions for forest management including inventories, maps, GIS and different information and communication technology solutions | Forest technology and IT entrepreneurs, technical social and natural science universities and academia, forestry research institutes |
| 3. Prosperous forest smallholders | |
| Organization and empowerment of forest smallholders | Forest owner associations, certification schemes, trade unions |
| Entrepreneurship and business management including marketing, sale and export | Forest owner associations, trade associations, forestry entrepreneurs, universities and knowledge institutions, trade and investment councils |
| Fair and transparent systems for wood measurement and for making payments to smallholders | Wood measurement associations, forestry information hubs |
| Secure access to markets | Forest owner associations, trade and investment councils, certification schemes |
| 4. Integrating water management in sustainable forestry | |
| Combined objectives (production, social and environmental) in forest management plans | Forestry companies and smallholders, supervised by forest and environment agencies and water authorities |
| Forest certification and chain of custody certification, including group certification of smallholders | Forestry companies, smallholders, certification schemes |
| Training in best management practices to forest owners (forestry companies and smallholders) forest supervisors, forest entrepreneurs and forest workers | Forest and environment agencies, water authorities, forest owner associations, universities and knowledge institutions (natural, technological, social) |
The list of key stakeholders is not comprehensive. It is compiled by the authors as an indicator of the diversity of stakeholders needed for successful restoration and management of sustainable forest landscapes