3rd part of the United Nations Conference for the Negotiation of a 
Successor Agreement to the International Tropical Timber 
Agreement, 1994  -  Issue #1 

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

Written and edited by:

Karen Alvarenga de Oliveira, Ph.D. 
Deborah Davenport, Ph.D. 
Lauren Flejzor 
Bo-Alex Fredvik 
Twig Johnson, Ph.D. 

Editor:

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

Director of IISD Reporting Services:

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


Vol. 24 No. 58
Monday, 27 June 2005

Online at http://www.iisd.ca/forestry/itto/itta3/ 

UN CONFERENCE FOR THE NEGOTIATION OF A SUCCESSOR AGREEMENT TO THE 
INTERNATIONAL TROPICAL TIMBER AGREEMENT, 1994, THIRD PART: 

27 JUNE – 1 JULY 2005

The third part of the United Nations Conference for the 
Negotiation of a Successor Agreement to the International Tropical 
Timber Agreement, 1994 (ITTA, 1994) will convene at the Palais des 
Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, from 27 June 1 July 2005. The 
Conference, which is held under the auspices of the United Nations 
Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), will focus on the 
thematic areas of scope and finance in the new agreement. 
Negotiations will be based on the final working document from the 
second part of the Conference (TD/Timber.3/L.4). The goal of the 
third part of the Conference is to reach agreement and adopt the 
successor agreement.

A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE UN CONFERENCE AND ITTA 

The International Tropical Timber Agreement (ITTA) was negotiated 
under UNCTAD’s auspices to: provide an effective framework for 
cooperation and consultation between countries producing and 
consuming tropical timber; promote the expansion and 
diversification of international trade in tropical timber and the 
improvement of structural conditions in the tropical timber 
market; promote and support research and development to improve 
forest management and wood utilization; and encourage the 
development of national policies for the sustainable utilization 
and conservation of tropical forests and their genetic resources 
and for maintaining the ecological balance in the regions 
concerned.

The ITTA was adopted on 18 November 1983, and entered into force 
on 1 April 1985. It remained in force for an initial period of 
five years and was extended twice for three-year periods. The 
Agreement was renegotiated during 1993-1994. The successor 
agreement, ITTA, 1994, was adopted on 26 January 1994, and entered 
into force on 1 January 1997. It contains broader provisions for 
information sharing, including non-tropical timber trade data, 
allows for consideration of non-tropical timber issues as they 
relate to tropical timber, and includes the Year 2000 Objective to 
enhance members’ capacity to implement a strategy for achieving 
exports of tropical timber and timber products from sustainably 
managed sources by the year 2000. The ITTA, 1994 also established 
the Bali Partnership Fund to assist producing members in achieving 
the Year 2000 Objective. Initially concluded for three years, the 
ITTA, 1994 was extended twice for three-year periods and is 
scheduled to expire on 31 December 2006.

The ITTA, 1983 established the International Tropical Timber 
Organization (ITTO), headquartered in Yokohama, Japan, which 
provides a framework for tropical timber producer and consumer 
countries to discuss, exchange information about and develop 
policies on issues relating to international trade in, and 
utilization of, tropical timber and the sustainable management of 
its resource base. The ITTO also administers assistance for 
related projects. The ITTO has 59 members divided into two 
caucuses: producer countries (33 members) and consumer countries 
(26 members). The ITTO’s membership represents 90 percent of world 
trade in tropical timber and 80 percent of the world’s tropical 
forests. The highest authority of the ITTO is the International 
Tropical Timber Council (ITTC), which consists of all ITTO members 
and meets twice per year. The ITTC performs, or arranges for the 
performance of, all functions necessary to carry out the 
provisions of the ITTA, 1994.

WORKING GROUP ON THE PREPARATIONS FOR NEGOTIATING A SUCCESSOR 
AGREEMENT TO THE ITTA, 1994: The Working Group met in Bern, 
Switzerland, from 7-11 April 2003. Participants reviewed responses 
by ITTO member countries on various aspects of the negotiation of 
a successor agreement to ITTA, 1994, including: the new 
agreement’s scope; the organization, duration and frequency of 
Council sessions; issues related to the Secretariat’s work; 
funding mechanisms; and the process for the Preparatory Committee. 
They also considered new and emerging issues relevant to the ITTC 
and ITTO’s relationship with other international organizations. 

PREPCOM I: Immediately following the 34th session of the ITTC, 
PrepCom I convened in Panama City, Panama, from 20-21 May 2003, to 
begin preparing a draft working document that would be used as the 
basis of the negotiations on the successor agreement to the ITTA, 
1994.

INTERSESSIONAL WORKING GROUP ON PREPARATIONS FOR NEGOTIATING A 
SUCCESSOR AGREEMENT TO THE ITTA, 1994: The Intersessional Working 
Group on preparations for negotiating a successor agreement to 
the ITTA, 1994 convened in Curitiba, Brazil, from 25-29 August 
2003. The working group, inter alia: assessed the distribution and 
role of conifers in international trade; reviewed ITTO work on 
non-timber forest products (NTFPs) and non-timber forest values 
(NTFVs); assessed the extent to which NTFPs, environmental 
services and NTFVs are covered in the ITTA, 1994 with a view to 
recommending how these could be strengthened in the successor 
agreement; proposed preambular language for the successor 
agreement; developed a shortened list of overarching objectives 
and definitions; and prepared a work plan for PrepCom II. 

PREPCOM II: Immediately following ITTC-35, delegates met in 
Yokohama, Japan, from 10-12 November 2003, for PrepCom II. Over 
the course of the three-day PrepCom, delegates reviewed the draft 
working document of the successor agreement with a view to 
clarifying the elements therein, posing questions and presenting 
their views on the text. Delegates produced a final draft working 
document that would serve as the basis for discussion at the UN 
Conference for the Negotiation of a Successor Agreement to the 
ITTA, 1994.

UN CONFERENCE FOR THE NEGOTIATION OF A SUCCESSOR AGREEMENT TO 
ITTA, 1994, FIRST PART: The UN Conference for the Negotiation of a 
Successor Agreement to the ITTA, 1994, First Part, met at the 
Palais des Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, from 26-30 July 2004, 
under the auspices of UNCTAD. Throughout the week, delegates based 
their discussions on the working document (TD/TIMBER.3/4), which 
contained all articles of the ITTA, 1994 alongside the 
corresponding articles of the negotiating text of the successor 
agreement. Working Group I addressed the Preamble, Chapter I 
(Objectives), Chapter II (Definitions), Chapter III (Organization 
and Administration), and Chapter IV (International Tropical Timber 
Council). Working Group II addressed Chapter V (Privileges and 
Immunities), Chapter VI (Finance), Chapter VII (Operational 
Activities), Chapter VIII (Relationship with the Common Fund for 
Commodities), Chapter IX (Statistics, Studies and Information), 
Chapter X (Miscellaneous), and Chapter XI (Final Provisions). Two 
contact groups, one established by each working group, met 
intermittently throughout the week to discuss some of the 
successor agreement’s more contentious issues. Since negotiators 
were unable to reach a final agreement, it was decided that the 
negotiation would reconvene in Geneva, Switzerland, from 14-18 
February 2005. The main areas of disagreement were on the 
financial structure of the new agreement and its objectives. Some 
members sought a limited number of objectives that could be 
broadly interpreted, while others sought to list specific 
objectives. On finance, the main issue of contention was the 
addition of an assessed Work Programme Account.

UN CONFERENCE FOR THE NEGOTIATION OF A SUCCESSOR AGREEMENT TO 
ITTA, 1994, SECOND PART: The UN Conference for the Negotiation of 
a Successor Agreement to the ITTA, 1994, Second Part, convened at 
the Palais des Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, from 14-18 February 
2005. During the week, delegates discussed numerous proposals to 
resolve issues from the first part of the UN Conference, but were 
unable to reach agreement on a number of cross-cutting proposals 
on the new agreement’s scope and financial arrangement. 

INTERSESSIONAL HIGHLIGHTS

COFO-17: The Food and Agriculture Organization Ministerial Meeting 
on Forests and the 17th session of the Committee on Forestry 
(COFO-17) were held in Rome, Italy, from 14-19 March 2005. The 
meetings attracted over 600 participants from governments, 
intergovernmental organizations and non-governmental organizations 
(NGOs). COFO-17 was also the stage for 21 side events that covered 
a range of topics, including forests and conflict, the role of 
civil society in implementing national forest programmes, 
international cooperation on forest fires, forests and climate 
change, forest law and compliance, and the integration of forestry 
into the New Economic Partnership for Africa’s Development.

In the Ministerial Statement, ministers committed themselves to, 
inter alia: improving forest management and intersectoral 
cooperation; enhancing regional and international cooperation to 
achieve sustainable forest management (SFM); enhancing the 
contribution of SFM to implementing the Millennium Development 
Goals; and improving domestic forest law enforcement and 
governance (FLEG). 

UNFF-5: The fifth session of the United Nations Forum on Forests 
(UNFF-5) was held at UN headquarters in New York, from 16-27 May 
2005. The main task before UNFF-5 was to review the effectiveness 
of the international arrangement on forests (IAF), and redesign it 
if necessary. UNFF-5 was unable to reach agreement on 
strengthening the IAF and could not produce either a ministerial 
statement or a negotiated outcome. By 26 May, delegates had agreed 
ad referendum to four global goals on: significantly increasing 
the area of protected forests and sustainably managed forests 
worldwide; reversing the decline in official development 
assistance for SFM; reversing the loss of forest cover; and 
enhancing forest-based economic, social and environmental 
benefits. They also agreed in principle to negotiate, at some 
future date, the terms of reference for a voluntary code or 
international understanding, as well as means of implementation. 
On 27 May, delegates decided to forward the draft negotiating text 
to UNFF-6, to be held in New York, from 13-24 February 2006. 

ENA FLEG PREPARATORY CONFERENCE: Over 130 participants from 32 
countries representing governments, NGOs, international 
organizations, industry and an intergovernmental body met at the 
Europe and North Asia (ENA) Forest Law Enforcement and Governance 
(FLEG) Preparatory Conference in Moscow, Russian Federation, from 
6-8 June 2005. The event was co-hosted by the World Bank and the 
Government of the Russian Federation, with financial support from 
eight international donors. Participants at the meeting, inter 
alia: discussed regional and national experiences and emerging ENA 
FLEG issues; attracted views from a range of stakeholders on ENA 
FLEG; and began drafting a Ministerial Statement and Indicative 
Plan of Action for the ENA Ministerial meeting in late 2005.  

ITTC-38: The thirty-eighth session of the International Tropical 
Timber Council (ITTC) and associated sessions of the Committees 
convened in Brazzaville, Congo, from 19-21 June 2005. Participants 
deliberated on, inter alia: ITTO missions to Liberia and Gabon; 
ex-post evaluations of project work, including on transboundary 
protected area work; phased approaches to certification; and the 
State of Tropical Forest Management report. Participants also 
discussed ITTO’s support to the Conference of Ministers in Charge 
of Forests in Central Africa, and approved US$7.6 million in 
project funding. A special event on the Congo Basin Partnership 
was held on 22 June.




This issue of the Earth Negotiations Bulletin © <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> is 
written and edited by Karen Alvarenga de Oliveira, Ph.D., Deborah 
Davenport, Ph.D., Lauren Flejzor, Bo-Alex Fredvik, and Twig 
Johnson, Ph.D. The Digital Editor is Diego Noguera. The Editor is 
Pamela S. Chasek, Ph.D. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> and the Director of IISD 
Reporting Services is Langston James “Kimo” Goree VI 
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