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Press Release
For maps and the reports, please visit
http://newsroom.wri.org
Comprehensive Maps Provide Key Tools to Manage Northern Forest Frontier
CAMBRIDGE, UK, Tuesday, September 12, 2006
– Leaders of government, business and environment groups now have the most
advanced set of tools available to manage the world’s final frontier of
untouched northern forests with today’s release of new map-based tools
detailing forests in Alaska, Canada, and Russia.
“Government, industry and the public all have a responsibility to manage
the forest frontier responsibly. Today we are releasing the tools needed to
live up to that responsibility. Ignorance can no longer be claimed as an
excuse,” said Jonathan Lash, president, World
Resources Institute (WRI).
Discussing his home country in particular, Peter Lee, executive director,
Global Forest Watch Canada,
said, “It is high time for everybody to realize that Canada is not an
endless sea of virgin forest anymore. Almost half of the forest is either
logged or fragmented.”
WRI and its partners in Global Forest Watch are releasing three sets of
electronic maps here today during a conference of the
Taiga Rescue Network titled “The
Global Importance of the Boreal Forest: Migratory Birds and the Paper
Industry.”
The maps and reports can be found at
www.wri.org, and www.globalforestwatch.org
and are titled:
Mapping Undisturbed Landscapes in Alaska
Canada’s Large Intact Forest Landscapes and Canada’s Forest Landscape
Fragments
Mapping High Conservation Value Forests of Primorsky Kray, Russian Far
East
The maps trace the frontier of industrial influence across the forests of
Canada and Alaska, and in the tiger habitats of the Russian Far East. A
research consortium of non-governmental organizations has examined thousands
of satellite images and other data, searching for signs of human influence.
The results have been verified in the field and in low-level aircraft
photography.
For instance, in Alaska, a considerable extent of the forest landscape
remains essentially untouched – unlike most of the lower 48 U.S. states that
have experienced significant transformations. Alaska boasts the highest
degree of forest intactness (85 percent) of any U.S. state.
“WRI and Global Forest Watch are providing a critical service to government
agencies, forest-product companies, consumers, and the public,” said Roger
Dower, president of the U.S. chapter of
the Forest Certification Council, a leading
worldwide forest certification body. “These maps of Alaska, Canada, and
Russia provide the basis for better certification decisions.”
“If you don’t map it, you can’t manage it,” added Dmitry Aksenov of
Global
Forest Watch Russia. “Our maps allow forest companies to translate their
policies into field operations.”
Several major companies have already adopted policies that relate to intact
forest ecosystems and which require maps for their implementation. For
example, the purchasing policy of IKEA demands that wood in solid wood
products “does not originate from intact natural forests, unless they are
certified according to a standard recognized by IKEA.” In its lending
policy,
Bank of America states that “lending proceeds will not go to logging
operations in intact forests as defined by WRI mapping.”
Canadian forest products companies Tembec
and Alberta-Pacific have also instituted
policies that relate to intact forest landscapes and forest fragments.
Several Canadian governments are not far behind.
British Columbia,
Ontario
and Nova Scotia have each adopted
policies that address the maintenance of large, unfragmented forest
landscapes.
“It is critical that NASA and other organizations continue to make satellite
images like Landsat freely available so that this kind of original,
independent, and previously unavailable work can continue,” said Lars
Laestadius, forest team leader at WRI. “Without quality satellite imagery,
detailed mapping of intactness borders, ecology, ownership, fires, and
protected areas will become even more difficult.”
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The World Resources Institute (www.wri.org) is an independent, non-partisan,
and nonprofit organization with a staff of more than 100 scientists,
economists, policy experts, business analysts, statistical analysts,
mapmakers, and communicators developing and promoting policies that will
help protect the Earth and improve people’s lives.
Global Forest Watch (www.globalforestwatch.org)
is an international network of institutions – initiated by WRI – which
collaborates to map and monitor forest-rich regions. To create these maps,
WRI partnered with Global Forest Watch Canada (www.globalforestwatch.ca),
Conservation Biology Institute (www.consbio.org),
Global Forest Watch Russia (www.forest.ru/watch) and World Wildlife Fund
Russia (www.wwf.ru).
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