Forestry and development - a global viewpoint.
The area of world forests is gradually declining because of various human activities, such as shifting cultivation, uncontrolled logging and industrial pollution. Continuation of the trends would have detrimental ecological, economic and social effects on global scale. The diversity of th...
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Finnish Society of Forest Science
1985-01-01
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Series: | Silva Fennica |
Online Access: | https://www.silvafennica.fi/article/5248 |
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doaj-e317d3779cfb42eab2fa788315d29cf72020-11-25T02:34:38ZengFinnish Society of Forest ScienceSilva Fennica2242-40751985-01-0119410.14214/sf.a15427Forestry and development - a global viewpoint.Simula, Markku The area of world forests is gradually declining because of various human activities, such as shifting cultivation, uncontrolled logging and industrial pollution. Continuation of the trends would have detrimental ecological, economic and social effects on global scale. The diversity of the problem is wide. The situation in the tropical developing countries differs from that in the industrialized world. With the present rates of population growth and unchanged forest policies, the fuelwood shortage in developing countries is rapidly aggravating. The need for more agricultural land tends to prejudice conscious efforts to increase wood production. The industrialized countries are experiencing problems in introducing forest policy means to maintain sufficient timber supply. Rapidly increasing pollution problem cause a serious hazard to the existence of the whole forest ecosystem. Forestry has primarily been a national issue of relatively low priority in political decision-making, which has resulted in insufficient action to remedy the situation at national and international level. The renewability of forest resources represents a strategic asset, the importance of which is bound to increase in the long-run potential for badly needed economic and social change in the worldâs poor rural areas will be lost. The PDF includes a summary in Finnish.https://www.silvafennica.fi/article/5248 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Simula, Markku |
spellingShingle |
Simula, Markku Forestry and development - a global viewpoint. Silva Fennica |
author_facet |
Simula, Markku |
author_sort |
Simula, Markku |
title |
Forestry and development - a global viewpoint. |
title_short |
Forestry and development - a global viewpoint. |
title_full |
Forestry and development - a global viewpoint. |
title_fullStr |
Forestry and development - a global viewpoint. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Forestry and development - a global viewpoint. |
title_sort |
forestry and development - a global viewpoint. |
publisher |
Finnish Society of Forest Science |
series |
Silva Fennica |
issn |
2242-4075 |
publishDate |
1985-01-01 |
description |
The area of world forests is gradually declining because of various human activities, such as shifting cultivation, uncontrolled logging and industrial pollution. Continuation of the trends would have detrimental ecological, economic and social effects on global scale. The diversity of the problem is wide. The situation in the tropical developing countries differs from that in the industrialized world. With the present rates of population growth and unchanged forest policies, the fuelwood shortage in developing countries is rapidly aggravating. The need for more agricultural land tends to prejudice conscious efforts to increase wood production. The industrialized countries are experiencing problems in introducing forest policy means to maintain sufficient timber supply. Rapidly increasing pollution problem cause a serious hazard to the existence of the whole forest ecosystem. Forestry has primarily been a national issue of relatively low priority in political decision-making, which has resulted in insufficient action to remedy the situation at national and international level. The renewability of forest resources represents a strategic asset, the importance of which is bound to increase in the long-run potential for badly needed economic and social change in the worldâs poor rural areas will be lost. The PDF includes a summary in Finnish. |
url |
https://www.silvafennica.fi/article/5248 |
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AT simulamarkku forestryanddevelopmentaglobalviewpoint |
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