5th session of the United Nations Forum on Forests  -  Issue #1        

EARTH NEGOTIATIONS BULLETIN <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
PUBLISHED BY THE INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR 
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (IISD) <http://www.iisd.org>

Written and edited by:

Andrew Baldwin 
Deborah Davenport, Ph.D. 
Radoslav Dimitrov, Ph.D. 
Reem Hajjar 
Peter Wood 

Editor:

Pamela S. Chasek, Ph.D. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Director, IISD Reporting Services:

Langston James "Kimo" Goree VI <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


Vol. 13 No. 123
Monday, 16 May 2005

Online at http://www.iisd.ca/forestry/unff/unff5/ 

FIFTH SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS FORUM ON FORESTS: 

16-27 MAY 2005

The fifth session of the United Nations Forum on Forests (UNFF-5) 
commences today at UN headquarters in New York. This is the final 
mandated session of UNFF. Delegates will review progress and 
consider future actions, review the effectiveness of the 
international arrangement on forests (IAF), consider the 
parameters of a mandate for developing a legal framework on all 
types of forests, and consider enhanced cooperation and policy and 
programme coordination. On 18 May, delegates will convene "Asia 
Day," consisting of a panel discussion on regional forest-related 
issues in Asia. From 25-26 May, UNFF-5 will convene a high-level 
ministerial segment and policy dialogue with heads of the 
Collaborative Partnership on Forests (CPF) organizations and a 
Multi-stakeholder Dialogue. 

A BRIEF HISTORY OF UNFF

The UNFF followed a five-year period (1995-2000) of forest policy 
dialogue facilitated by the Intergovernmental Panel on Forests 
(IPF) and the Intergovernmental Forum on Forests (IFF). In October 
2000, the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations 
(ECOSOC), in resolution E/2000/35, established UNFF as a 
subsidiary body with the main objective to promote the management, 
conservation and sustainable development of all types of forests. 
To achieve its main objective, principal functions were identified 
for UNFF, namely to: facilitate implementation of forest-related 
agreements and foster a common understanding on sustainable forest 
management (SFM); provide for continued policy development and 
dialogue among governments, international organizations, and major 
groups, as identified in Agenda 21, as well as to address forest 
issues and emerging areas of concern in a holistic, comprehensive 
and integrated manner; enhance cooperation as well as policy and 
programme coordination on forest-related issues; foster 
international cooperation and monitor, assess and report on 
progress; and strengthen political commitment to the management, 
conservation and sustainable development of all types of forests. 
The IPF/IFF processes produced more than 270 proposals for action 
towards SFM, known collectively as the IPF/IFF Proposals for 
Action. These proposals were the basis for the UNFF Multi-Year 
Programme of Work (MYPOW) and Plan of Action and were discussed at 
annual UNFF sessions. Country- and organization-led initiatives 
also contribute to UNFF. Now, UNFF must review progress and 
consider future actions, review the effectiveness of the 
international arrangement on forests (IAF), and consider 
recommending the parameters of a mandate for developing a legal 
mandate on all types of forests.

ORGANIZATIONAL SESSION: The UNFF organizational session and 
informal consultations on the MYPOW took place from 12-16 February 
2001, at UN headquarters in New York. Delegates agreed that the 
UNFF Secretariat would be located in New York, and addressed 
progress towards the establishment of the Collaborative 
Partnership on Forests (CPF), a partnership of 14 major 
forest-related international organizations, institutions and 
convention secretariats. 

UNFF-1: The first session of UNFF took place from 11-23 June 2001, 
at UN headquarters in New York. Delegates discussed and adopted 
decisions on UNFF's MYPOW, a Plan of Action for the implementation 
of the IPF/IFF Proposals for Action, and UNFF's work with the CPF. 
They also recommended establishing three ad hoc expert groups to 
provide technical advice to UNFF on: approaches and mechanisms for 
monitoring, assessment and reporting; finance and transfer of 
environmentally sound technologies; and consideration with a view 
to recommending the parameters of a mandate for developing a legal 
framework on all types of forests.

UNFF-2: The second session of UNFF took place from 4-15 March 2002, 
at UN headquarters in New York. Delegates adopted a Ministerial 
Declaration and Message to the World Summit on Sustainable 
Development and eight decisions on: combating deforestation and 
forest degradation; forest conservation and protection of unique 
types of forests and fragile ecosystems; rehabilitation and 
conservation strategies for countries with low forest cover; 
rehabilitation and restoration of degraded lands and the promotion 
of natural and planted forests; concepts, terminology and 
definitions; specific criteria for the review of the effectiveness 
of the IAF; proposed revisions to the medium-term plan for 
2002-2005; and other matters.

UNFF-3: UNFF-3 met in Geneva, Switzerland, from 26 May - 6 June 
2003. UNFF-3 adopted six resolutions on: enhanced cooperation and 
policy and programme coordination; forest health and productivity; 
economic aspects of forests; maintaining forest cover to meet 
present and future needs; the UNFF Trust Fund; and strengthening 
the Secretariat. UNFF-3 also finalized the terms of reference for 
the three ad hoc expert groups, a task that had been carried 
forward from UNFF-2. Also adopted was a decision on the voluntary 
reporting format.

UNFF-4: UNFF-4 convened in Geneva, Switzerland, from 3-14 May 2004. 
UNFF-4 adopted five resolutions on: forest-related scientific 
knowledge; social and cultural aspects of forests; monitoring, 
assessment and reporting and criteria and indicators; review of 
the effectiveness of the international arrangement on forests; and 
finance and transfer of environmentally sound technologies. UNFF-4 
attempted but could not agree on resolutions on traditional 
forest-related knowledge and enhanced cooperation and policy and 
programme coordination. 

INTERSESSIONAL HIGHLIGHTS

INTERNATIONAL TROPICAL TIMBER AGREEMENT: The United Nations 
Conference on the Negotiation of a Successor Agreement to the ITTA, 
1994 met at the Palais des Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, from 
26-30 July 2004, under the auspices of the United Nations 
Conference on Trade and Development. No agreement was reached on 
the financial structure of the new agreement and its objectives. 

The second session of the Conference convened in Geneva, from 
14-18 February 2005, and continued discussions on disputed text 
carried forward from the first session. Numerous proposals on 
unresolved cross-cutting issues were tabled during the week and 
delegates were unable to reach final agreement. A third round of 
negotiations will take place from 27 June - 1 July 2005 in Geneva.

AHEG-PARAM: The United Nations Forum on Forests Ad Hoc Expert 
Group on Consideration with a View to Recommending the Parameters 
of a Mandate for Developing a Legal Framework on All Types of 
Forests (AHEG-PARAM) met from 7-10 September 2004, at UN 
headquarters in New York. Comprising 68 experts, the Expert Group: 
assessed existing regional and international binding and 
non-binding instruments and processes relevant to forests; 
considered reports prepared by countries, members of the CPF on 
Forests and the UNFF Secretariat; considered the outcomes of 
previous UNFF sessions and the IAF; reviewed experiences of 
existing forest-related and other relevant organizations and 
agreements, focusing on complementarities, gaps and duplications; 
and adopted a report providing a range of options for the future 
framework to be forwarded to UNFF-5. 

COUNTRY-LED INITIATIVE ON THE FUTURE IAF: A country-led initiative 
(CLI) in support of discussions on a future IAF was held in 
Zapopan-Guadalajara, Mexico, from 25-28 January 2005. The purpose 
of the initiative was twofold: to elaborate the critical elements 
that countries wanted to see included in a future IAF; and to 
provide an informal contribution that would facilitate a decision 
concerning the future IAF to be taken at UNFF-5. Participants 
considered five aspects of a future IAF: objectives and functions; 
modalities; options for financing; identification of the 
international and domestic roles and contributions of the 
potential components of the IAF; and the challenge ahead. The CLI 
produced the Guadalajara Report and submitted it to the United 
Nations. The Guadalajara Report is not a consensus report, but 
synthesizes the personal opinions expressed during the meeting.

DIALOGUE ON ILLEGAL LOGGING: An international dialogue on illegal 
logging, sponsored by The Forests Dialogue, was held from 7-10 
March 2005, in Hong Kong, China. The dialogue sought to raise 
awareness among business leaders of the problems posed by illegal 
logging, to identify solutions, and to secure agreement on how 
participants can work together for widespread adoption of these 
solutions. Participants agreed to call on G-8 Ministers to 
implement existing government commitments, including increasing 
development assistance for poor countries to combat illegal 
logging and recognizing their responsibility as major consumer 
nations to reduce imports of forest products from illegal sources.

COFO-17: The seventeenth session of the FAO Committee on Forestry 
(COFO-17) convened in Rome, Italy, from 15-19 March 2005. 
Delegates discussed the 2005 State of the World's Forests report, 
Regional Forestry Commissions, international cooperation in forest 
fire preparedness, the role of forests in contributing to the 
Millennium Development Goals, and the World Forestry Congress. A 
Ministerial Meeting on Forests also convened on 14 March 2005 in 
advance of COFO-17, at which ministers considered international 
cooperation on forest fire management and maintaining a commitment 
to sustainable forest management, and adopted a Ministerial 
Statement. 

FOREST LANDSCAPE RESTORATION IMPLEMENTATION WORKSHOP: The Forest 
Landscape Restoration Implementation Workshop was held in 
Petr�polis, Brazil, from 4-8 April 2005. The workshop sought to 
find ways to increase understanding of good practices and 
opportunities in Forest Landscape Restoration activities, 
stimulate political support, and catalyze and demonstrate their 
implementation around the world. The workshop was an organization- 
and country-led initiative in support of UNFF, sponsored by Brazil 
and the Global Partnership on Forest Landscape Restoration. 
Participants developed the Petr�polis Challenge, a declaration 
describing the goals and current status of forest landscape 
restoration and produced a report that was forwarded to UNFF.

THINGS TO LOOK FOR TODAY

OPENING SESSION: Delegates will convene from 10:00 am - 1:00 pm in 
Plenary to hear opening statements, attend to organizational 
matters, and discuss enhanced cooperation. In the afternoon, 
delegates will resume in Plenary to commence discussion on: 
reviewing the effectiveness of the IAF; future actions; and 
consideration with a view to recommending the parameters of a 
mandate for developing a legal framework on all types of forests.




This issue of the Earth Negotiations Bulletin � <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> is 
written and edited by Andrew Baldwin, Deborah Davenport, Ph.D., 
Radoslav Dimitrov, Ph.D., Reem Hajjar, and Peter Wood. The Digital 
Editor is Dan Birchall. The Editor is Pamela S. Chasek, Ph.D. 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> and the Director of IISD Reporting Services is 
Langston James "Kimo" Goree VI <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>. The Sustaining 
Donors of the Bulletin are the Government of the United States of 
America (through the Department of State Bureau of Oceans and 
International Environmental and Scientific Affairs), the 
Government of Canada (through CIDA), the Swiss Agency for 
Environment, Forests and Landscape (SAEFL), the United Kingdom 
(through the Department for International Development - DFID), the 
Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Government of Germany 
(through the German Federal Ministry of Environment - BMU, and the 
German Federal Ministry of Development Cooperation - BMZ), the 
Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the European Commission 
(DG-ENV), and the Italian Ministry of Environment. General Support 
for the Bulletin during 2005 is provided by the United Nations 
Environment Programme (UNEP), the Government of Australia, the 
Austrian Federal Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, Environment 
and Water Management, the Ministry of Sustainable Development and 
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Sweden, the Ministry of 
Environment and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Norway, the 
Ministry of Environment and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of 
Finland, Swan International, the Japanese Ministry of Environment 
(through the Institute for Global Environmental Strategies - IGES) 
and the Japanese Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (through 
the Global Industrial and Social Progress Research Institute - 
GISPRI). Funding for translation of the Earth Negotiations 
Bulletin into French has been provided by the International 
Organization of the Francophonie (IOF) and the French Ministry of 
Foreign Affairs. Funding for the translation of the Earth 
Negotiations Bulletin into Spanish has been provided by the 
Ministry of Environment of Spain. The opinions expressed in the 
Earth Negotiations Bulletin are those of the authors and do not 
necessarily reflect the views of IISD or other donors. Excerpts 
from the Earth Negotiations Bulletin may be used in non-commercial 
publications with appropriate academic citation. For information 
on the Bulletin, including requests to provide reporting services, 
contact the Director of IISD Reporting Services at <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, 
+1-646-536-7556 or 212 East 47th St. #21F, New York, NY 10017, USA. 
The ENB Team at UNFF-5 can be contacted by e-mail at 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.

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