SDG indicators 15.1.1 and 15.2.1 - Forest area and sustainable forest management

This course has been developed to guide countries in reporting on Indicators 15.1.1 and 15.2.1. It illustrates the rationale of the indicators, the definitions and methodologies on which monitoring activities are based, and explains the process and the tools available for compiling data related to the two indicators through the Global Forest Resources Assessment Programme (available in English, French and Spanish).

SDG 15 - Indicators of sustainable forests and mountains

Mountain forests

 

Mountains cover around 27 percent of the earth’s land surface, and forests cover more than 40 percent of the global mountain area.

Healthy mountain forests are crucial to the ecological health of the world. They protect watersheds that supply freshwater to more than half of humankind. They also harbour wildlife, provide food and fodder for mountain peoples and are important sources of timber and non-wood products. Moreover, they protect the earth and contribute to shielding the atmosphere from CO2 emissions.

Protecting these forests and making sure they are carefully managed is an important step towards sustainable mountain development. In the last decades, tropical mountain forests have been disappearing at an astounding rate. Deforestation is generally driven by population growth, the expansion of intensive agriculture, uncertain land tenure, inequitable land distribution and the absence of strong and stable institutions.

Crucially, mountain forests perform a protective function against natural hazards, so that when forest cover is lost and the land is left unprotected, runoff and soil erosion increase, provoking landslides, avalanches and floods, to the detriment of villages, transport systems, human infrastructure and of the food security of vulnerable populations.

Putting power back into the hands of mountain people is one important step towards alleviating their poverty and, in turn, protecting mountain forests. Measures that could accomplish these aims include providing incentives for biodiversity and agro-biodiversity conservation as well as the inclusion sustainable forest management plans into national policies. 

United Nations General Assembly Resolution: Sustainable Mountain Development (2006)

United Nations General Assembly Resolution: Sustainable Mountain Development (2006)

publication

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on Sustainable mountain development at the 60th Session. A/RES/60/198

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United Nations General Assembly Resolution: Rendering assistance to poor mountain countries to overcome obstacles in socio-economic and ecological areas (2005)

publication

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly at the 59th Session.
A/RES/59/238

 

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United Nations General Assembly Resolution: Sustainable Development in Mountain Regions (2004)

United Nations General Assembly Resolution: Sustainable Development in Mountain Regions (2004)

publication

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly at the 58th Session: Sustainable development in mountain regions. A/RES/58/216

 

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Land-Water Linkages in Rural Watersheds

Land-Water Linkages in Rural Watersheds

publication

"Deforestation in the Himalayas blamed for killer flood" - headlines such as this one from August 2000 suggest that upstream land use practices have important impacts on water resources and affect the people downstream at a watershed scale. Payments by downstream people to upstream people for "environmental services" such as...

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 United Nations General Assembly Resolution: Status of preparation for the International Year of Mountains, 2002 (2001)

United Nations General Assembly Resolution: Status of preparation for the International Year of Mountains, 2002 (2001)

publication

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly at 55th Session.
A/RES/55/189

 

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Environmentally sound forest road construction in mountainous terrain

Environmentally sound forest road construction in mountainous terrain

publication

The study was carried out in semi-natural forests of the Alps in the province of Salzburg, Austria. Although the concept of opening up forests by a permanent road network as a precondition for forest management and utilization of forests in a sustainable manner is widely accepted both to specialists and to...

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