Heart of Borneo will preserve elephants and orangutan
Ecology
escrito por HOLAVERDE.COM   
viernes,, 01 de julio de 2011

KOTA, KINABALU/ Orangutan and pygmy elephant received a boost in its preservation. Nearly 300,000 hectares of important habitat in the forest reserves of Ulu Segama-Malua and Tangkulap-Pinangah, in the Malaysian state of Sabah, Borneo, were certificated.

The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certified sites are considered to have the highest density in the world of orangutan sub-species, Pongo pygmaeus morio, and the Borneo pygmy elephant.

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More for the animals

Endangered species receive a little relief as the new protected aras are covering 34,000 hectares in Malua Biobank, an innovative public-private financial partnership started by the Sabah government and its Forestry Department that brings business investment into conservation management. 

The FSC certification is considered the most credible global sustainable forest management standard that harnesses social and environmental as well as economic benefits. Now, with the appliance of this new certificate, controlling preservation will be easier.

The announcement was made on June 28, as part of the largest ever tri-annual FSC General Assembly, held for the first time in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah.

For the planet

Sabah’s Forestry Department (SFD) has been recognised by WWF as a leader in the pursuit of sustainable forestry in the Heart of Borneo and has imposed a deadline of 2014 for certification of all forestry concessions in the state.

SFD director, Datuk Sam Mannan, said the announcement quadrupled the area of land under FSC certification in Sabah and he hoped it would encourage other concession holders to pursue certification based on an internationally recognized standard such as the FSC, before its 2014 deadline.

WWF Malaysia CEO Dato’ Dr Dionysius Sharma, congratulated SFD on this remarkable achievement, saying that “FSC certification is a crucial part of independent third party verification of sustainable forest management and its critical role in sustaining viable populations of some of the world’s most endangered wildlife here in the Heart of Borneo, one of the most bio-diverse areas on the planet,” he said.

One step forward

The certification process was facilitated with SFD via WWF’s Global Forest and Trade Network in Malaysia (GFTN-Malaysia) with support from USAID’s Responsible Asia Forest and Trade (RAFT) program, both of which create market conditions which help conserve the world’s forests.

George White, Head of WWF’s GFTN, said there had been very little certification of Asian tropical forests to date.  “This announcement represents a significant leap forward for sustainable management of tropical forests in Asia and evidences the long lasting relationship between SFD and WWF,” he added.

WWF’s Heart of Borneo Leader, Adam Tomasek stressed the importance of this announcement from a global perspective. “This is a living example of how government, business and WWF can work together to make forests worth more standing than cut down. It is also one of the key foundations in the development of a Green Economy for the HoB – a concept which is gaining increasing relevance and support internationally,” he said.