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In the Baltic States and western part of the Former Soviet Union (FSU),
most deforestation from felling took place in the first half of the 20th
century. After World War II, enormous reforestation programmes were carried
out alongside industrial logging. In the Russian Federation, there has
been a sharp decline in the extraction of forest products in recent years
linked to the general decline of industry throughout the FSU. In the late
1990s, total removals amounted to only between one-quarter and one-third
of the amounts extracted in the 1970s and 1980s (FAO 2001a).
| Change in forested land 1990-2000
by sub-region: Europe |
 |
| |
total land area
(million ha) |
total forest 1990
(million ha) |
total forest 2000
(million ha) |
% of land forested in 2000 |
change 1990-2000
(million ha) |
% change per year |
 |
| Central Europe |
209.3 |
48.9 |
50.3 |
24.0 |
1.3 |
0.3 |
| Eastern Europe |
1 789.3 |
870.7 |
875.1 |
48.9 |
4.4 |
0.0 |
| Western Europe |
360.8 |
122.4 |
125.9 |
34.9 |
3.6 |
0.4 |
 |
| Europe |
2 359.4 |
1 042.0 |
1 051.3 |
44.6 |
9.3 |
0.1 |
 |
| Source: compiled from FAO 2001a
Note: numbers may not add due to rounding |
Significant areas of forest were nationalized as early as 1918 in the
FSU and in the 1950s in the countries of Central and Eastern Europe (CEE),
and protected categories of forest were established (OECD and World Bank
1993). With increasing poverty in these countries and a loss of traditional
communist era livelihoods, protected areas and forests in CEE are now
under pressure from illegal tree felling which, in some places, has pushed
some rare species to the brink of extinction. An increasing trend towards
privatization in many countries since 1990 is also reducing the area of
protected forest (EEA 1995), although vast forested lands in the Komi
Republic and the Lake Baikal basin have recently been designated as UNESCO
World Heritage Sites, effectively halting planned major logging operations
(RFSCEP 2000).
Significant forest degradation has been caused by industrial pollution.
Vast tracts of forests in CEE still suffer the lingering consequences
of acidification, although SO2 emissions and 'acid rain' have
been reduced (see 'Atmosphere' section) and the
deteriorating situation appears to have stabilized (EEA 1997 and UNECE
and EC 2000). Degraded forests are found in the Russian Federation around
industrial centres in the Urals, the Kola Peninsula and Siberia, with
more than 500 000 ha damaged in the Siberian region of Norilsk alone (Mnatsikanian
1992). Chernobyl affected about 1 million ha of forests in the Russian
Federation as well as large areas in Belarus and Ukraine. They will be
excluded from use and public access for the foreseeable future (FAO 2001a).
In the mid-1990s, large areas of forests were lost in the Russian Federation
from causes other than logging. Insects were responsible for 46 per cent
of the damage, forest fires 33 per cent and unfavourable weather 16 per
cent (MoNP Russian Federation 1996). The future of the Russian Federation's
850 million ha of temperate and boreal forests (22 per cent of the world's
total and the largest forest area in any one country) is important not
just for the country but for the entire region because of its role as
a carbon sink (see 'Polar Regions'). All forests
in the Russian Federation are state owned and are divided into three groups
for management purposes (see table).
| Managing the world's most extensive
forests: forest estate in the Russian Federation |
 |
GROUP I
Protection forests |
GROUP II
Multipurpose forests |
GROUP III
Forests for commercial use |
 |
| 21 per cent of total forest area |
6 per cent of total forest area |
73 per cent of total forest area |
| |
| Strict felling regimes |
Harvesting restricted to amount of annual growth |
Clear cutting allowed |
| |
| Changes in proportion of forest area 1966-88: |
| increasing |
increasing |
decreasing |
| |
| Source: FAO (2001a) |
Forest clearance for agricultural land, terracing and the creation of
fruit orchards has had adverse consequences on the environment and biodiversity
in southeastern Europe, especially Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Former Yugoslav republic of Macedonia.
Forest ecosystems, particularly those close to rural settlements,
have been significantly degraded due to overexploitation for fuelwood
and overgrazing (REC 2000). The severe energy crisis in the mid-1990s
in Armenia and Georgia also caused illegal logging on a large scale for
home heating and cooking (Radvadnyi and Beroutchachvili 1999). The affected
forests include oak and other tree stands which are characterized by high
biological diversity in comparison with other types of forests.The harvesting
of coastal shrubs and forests has also created problems, especially for
birds, which use these habitats for nesting (REC 2000).
Around the Mediterranean, forests have been degraded since historic times,
from overgrazing and wood removal, and little undisturbed forest now remains
(FAO 2001a). Fire is one of the great enemies of Mediterranean wooded
areas due to the climatic conditions (dry air and strong winds) and the
combustibility of the plant cover; it is estimated that on average 500
000 ha are burned each year. The fires are almost always caused by humans:
in traditional herding areas, 'pastoral fires' are still frequent, especially
in scrubland, while elsewhere the majority are due to negligence rather
than criminal intent. The number of fires rises rapidly in dry years,
especially in tourist areas.
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