Sustainable Forest Management (SFM) Toolbox

Case Details

Learning lessons from China’s forest rehabilitation efforts. National level review and special focus on Guangdong Province

Author(s) Chokkalingam, U., Zaizhi, Z., Chunfeng, W. & Toma, T. (eds.)
Year of publication 2006
Many tropical countries have achieved economic growth at the expense of converting their forests. Some of those countries have prospered and others remain impoverished despite converting their forests. Both have the will now to restore some of their lost forest cover and commit resources to this end. Forest rehabilitation is not a new phenomenon. But as tropical forest conversion continues seemingly unabated, rehabilitating degraded landscapes is likely to become more and more important. Countries individually or collectively will increasingly turn to rehabilitation to undo the negative consequences of diminishing forest cover. Countries that had or still have large forested areas, like Brazil, Indonesia, Vietnam, Philippines and China, have initiated programs meant to restore millions of hectares. This report is one of six emerging from the study ‘Review of forest rehabilitation: Lessons from the past’. This study attempted to capture the rich but under-utilised experiences of many years of forest rehabilitation in Brazil, China, Indonesia, Peru, Philippines and Vietnam, and make this information available to guide ongoing and future rehabilitation efforts.
Type of Case
Printed publication (book, sourcebook, journal article…)
Publisher
CIFOR, Chinese Academy of Forestry Research Institute of Tropical Forestry, State Forestry Administration Afforestation Department
Region
Asia Pacific
Biome
All
Forest Type
Degraded forest
Primary Designated Function
All