Chinese Investment in African Forests

Fri, Aug 2, 2013
By publisher
2 MIN READ

Environment

A report by International Institute for Environment and Development identifies research as a tool that shed light on the positive and negative effects of Chinese investment in Africa

A REPORT published by the International Institute for Environment and Development, IIED, on July 31, has identified research that can shed light on the positive and negative effects of Chinese investment in African forests, and also show how to improve governance of timber trade. The report summarises the first meeting of the China-Africa Forest Governance Learning Platform, a new group that aims to ensure that such investments are environmentally sustainable and provide benefits to local communities.

Platform participants proposed a research on the discrepancies between data on African forest product exports and Chinese imports; guidelines, standards, principles and legislation in Africa and China which affect the activities of Chinese forest enterprises in African countries. Others are practices and models of scales and types of effective forest management, and related issues such as land and forest tenure, in China and African countries.

Cross-sectoral analysis to understand how Chinese investments in non-forest sector investments impact on forest governance; timber trade and forestry investments involving Chinese companies in specific African countries – through case studies and investigative reporting by Chinese journalists. Other research areas are Chinese domestic market regulations and consumer priorities, and their potentials to encourage overseas Chinese companies to apply sustainable forest management principles.

“China’s relationship with Africa is maturing and there is great potential – through research, dialogue and joint action – for forests, and local people’s forest rights and benefits, to be amongst the winners from this,” says James Mayers, head of IIED’s Natural Resources Group.

“There is much work to be done to improve compliance with laws protecting forests and local benefits, and there is great scope in efforts to foster sustainable enterprises and to develop timber legality verification programmes. Our hope is that others will join in to develop the China-Africa Forest Governance Learning Platform so that this exciting potential can be realized,” says Mayers.

The meeting of the China-Africa Forest Governance Learning Platform was co-hosted by the IIED, the Chinese Academy of Forestry and the Global Environmental Institute in March 2013 in Beijing, China.

— Aug. 12, 2013 @ 01:00 GMT

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