Sustainable Forest Management to Secure Multiple Benefits in Pakistan’s High Conservation Areas
Status:
Ongoing
Project start date:
January 2016
Estimated end date:
December 2021
Focus area:
Project office:
Implementing partner:
PAK-Ministry of Climate Change
Funding Support by
Donor name
Amount contributed
$10,016,441
Delivery in previous fiscal year
2021 $49,550
2020 $1,297,086
2019 $1,940,126
2018 $2,373,319
2017 $876,610
2016 $14,751
Project Summary:
Sustainable forest management is a means of protecting forests whilst offering direct benefits to people and the environment. It contributes to local livelihoods and offers environmental benefits such as carbon sequestration and conserving water, soil
Less than 5 percent of Pakistan’s total area is under forest cover, and 1.5 percent of these forests are lost every year. This has profound impacts on Pakistan’s biodiversity, environment
Poverty, weak controls and lack of awareness contribute to over-exploitation. Bringing communities into forest management and thereby helping them achieve sustainable livelihoods, can thus conserve forestland across Pakistan.
This project focuses on seven forest landscapes (145,300 hectares) containing three vulnerable and important forest types: temperate coniferous forests in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, dry scrub forests in Punjab, and riverine forests in Punjab and Sindh.
Objectives:
To promote sustainable forest management in Pakistan’s west Himalayan coniferous forests, scrub forests and riverine forests for biodiversity conservation, mitigation of climate change, and securing forest ecosystem services.
Planned activities:
Embed sustainable forest management into landscape-scale planning by:
- Mapping forest resources and ecosystem services to inform planning, development, implementation
and monitoring at the landscape level. - Developing
landscape level spatial plans which integrate biodiversity, ecosystem services, climate mitigation and use of resources by local communities. - Developing protocols to mainstream ecosystem services, climate risk mitigation
and biodiversity into forest management planning.
Strengthen biodiversity conservation in and around high conservation value forests by:
- Changing the use of high conservation value forests towards biodiversity conservation and non-exhaustive community forest management, thereby avoiding deforestation.
- Establishing model community governance and management systems.
- Strengthening capacities in biodiversity conservation through training, guidelines, co-management
and enforcement.
Enhance carbon sequestration in and around high conservation value forests in target landscapes by:
- Protecting existing forests.
- Restoring and rehabilitating degraded coniferous forests by closing them for natural regeneration and new plantation.
- Rehabilitating scrub forests through dry afforestation techniques.
- Reforesting riverine tracts with indigenous trees.
- Documenting best practices and building capacities in silviculture (local-level forest management) for reforestation and restoration.
- Applying and validate the Pakistan-specific REDD-RPP methodology for measuring carbon stock in target areas.
Download the PROJECT BRIEF