Dire Shortage Of Timber Forcing Merchants To Import Commodity - kenyadetails


He reveals that the Kenya Forest Service (KFS) has generated plantation logging plans, and is in the process of completing an inventory that will establish the extent of forest plantations in Kenya.
This plan he says, may help increase the forest cover that currently stands at 312,500 acres that comprises 6 percent of the gazetted forests in the country.

"Once we lift the ban, allocation of harvesting areas will be through the provisions of the Public Procurement and Disposal Act 2005 that provides for competitive bidding, while maintaining a reserve price," he adds.
The chairman of the Kenya Timber Manufacturers Association Samuel Gitonga admits that saw millers are unable to get enough raw materials to sustain business.
He blames the ban on logging for the escalation of timber prices and loss of over 120,000 jobs in sawmilling sector.

Gitonga says that the association id ready to follow forestry management rules in accessing public plantations to meet the local timber demand.

But through innovation a company has already started making coffins from recycled cartons that are biodegradable materials in a bid to save the already depleted forests from extinction.

The East African Packaging Industry makes the coffins from cast- off materials hence reducing wastage and creating more jobs for those who will collect the recycled paper.

The use of wooden coffins harms our environment significantly.

Kenya’s forest cover is on two percent and we cannot afford to continue cut more trees for making coffins," the Chief Environmental Research Officer at the National Environmental Authority (NEMA) Francis Inganga says.

He says that the product is in line with the provisions of Environmental Management and Coordination Act and the government’s vision 2030 on sustainable use natural resources and protection of the environment.

According to statistics, Kenya loses 616,000 trees very year to the coffins industry as 80 per cent of the dead are buried in wooden coffins.

Due to the partial ban, 95,000 acres of over-mature forest industrial plantation valued at over 450 million dollars are undergoing value deterioration as some rot and other falls due to heavy winds.

At the same time, there are approximately 45,000 acres of forest plantations between ages 10 and 22 due for commercial thinning with potential to generate 44 million dollars.

Industry players blame the huge cost gap to the increased timber prices - from U.S. $100 dollars to more than U.S. $375 dollars.

Facing imminent operation problems, the recently rejuvenated 87, 000-tonne capacity Webuye Paper Mills has already started entering into partnerships wit tree farmers in a bid to sustain itself and avoid collapsing again.

The world’s forest biodiversity is threatened by a high global rate of deforestation and forest degradation as well as a decline in primary forest area.

In many countries, however, there is a continued positive trend towards the conservation of forest biological diversity via dedicated conservation areas.

According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization’s (FAO) Global Forest Resources Assessment 2010 emphasizes that forests where humans have intervened can still hold important biodiversity values, contribute significantly to environmental protection, and sustain livelihoods, provided they are well managed.

The UN agency notes that South America accounted for the largest proportion of the loss in primary forests, followed by Africa and Asia.

Other threats to forest biodiversity include unsustainable forest management, climate change, forest fires, insect pests and diseases, natural disasters and invasive species - all of which are causing severe damage in some countries.

Greater investments in sustainable forest management are urgently required to better conserve and manage forest biodiversity.

The country also needs to improve affective conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity in production forests.

The country currently allows only Comply, Timsales, Raiply and Pan Paper to access public plantations for timber, pulp wood, plywood and transmission poles.