Sustainable forest management in Cameroon needs more than approved forest management plans

Date

2008

Authors

Cerutti, Paolo
Nasi, Robert
Tacconi, Luca

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Resilience Alliance

Abstract

One of the main objectives of the 1994 Cameroonian forestry law is to improve the management of production forests by including minimum safeguards for sustainability into compulsory forest management plans. As of 2007, about 3.5 million hectares (60%) of the productive forests are harvested following the prescriptions of 49 approved management plans. The development and implementation of these forest management plans has been interpreted by several international organizations as long awaited evidence that sustainable management is applied to production forests in Cameroon. Recent reviews of some plans have concluded, however, that their quality was inadequate. This paper aims at taking these few analyses further by assessing the actual impacts that approved management plans have had on sustainability and harvesting of commercial species. We carry out an assessment of the legal framework, highlighting a fundamental flaw, and a thorough comparison between data from approved management plans and timber production data. Contrary to the principles adhered to by the 1994 law, we find that the government has not yet succeeded in implementing effective minimum sustainability safeguards and that, in 2006, 68% of the timber production was still carried out as though no improved management rules were in place. The existence of a number of approved management plans cannot be used a proxy for proof of improved forest management.

Description

Keywords

Cameroon, certification, law enforcement, sustainable forest management

Citation

Ecology and Society 13.2 article 36 (2008)

Source

Ecology and Society

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

DOI

Restricted until