the UN SECRETARY-GENERAL
--
MESSAGE ON THE INTERNATIONAL DAY OF FORESTS
21 March 2013
Forests are vital
for our well-being. They cover nearly a
third of the globe and provide an invaluable variety of social, economic and
environmental benefits. Three-fourths of
freshwater comes from forested catchment areas.
Forests stabilize slopes and prevent landslides; they protect coastal
communities against tsunami and storm.
More than 3 billion people use wood for fuel; some 2 billion people
depend on forests for sustenance and income, and 750 million live within
them.
By proclaiming the
International Day of Forests, the United Nations has created a new platform to
raise awareness about the importance of all types of forest ecosystems to sustainable
development.
Forests are often at
the frontlines of competing demands. Urbanization
and the consumption needs of growing populations are linked to deforestation
for large-scale agriculture and the extraction of valuable timber, oil and
minerals. Often the roads that provide
infrastructure for these enterprises ease access for other forest users who can
further exacerbate the rate of forest and biodiversity loss.
Forests are also
central to combating climate change. They
store more carbon than is in the atmosphere.
Deforestation and land-use changes account for 17 per cent of
human-generated carbon dioxide emissions.
As weather patterns alter due to climate change, many forested areas are
increasingly vulnerable. This underlines
the urgency of a global, inclusive, legally binding climate change agreement
that will address greenhouse gas emissions and encourage the protection and
sustainable management of forests.
Notwithstanding
these immense challenges, there are encouraging signs. The global rate of deforestation has decreased
by almost 20 per cent in the past decade.
We need now to intensify efforts to protect forests, including by
incorporating them into the post-2015 development agenda and the sustainable
development goals.
On this first International
Day of Forests, I urge governments, businesses and all sectors of society to
commit to reducing deforestation, preventing forest degradation, reducing
poverty and promoting sustainable livelihoods for all forest-dependent
peoples.
No comments:
Post a Comment