Expanding Reduced Impact Logging: Difference between revisions

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{{PolicyInterventionEffectTemplate
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|EffectOnComponent=Forest management
|EffectOnComponent=Forest management
|EffectDescription=RIL affects the forest management in two ways: (i) Less land being used for forestry as it increases the  harvest efficiency (due to less losses); (ii) less available forest residues that could, for example, be used for energy production.
|EffectDescription=RIL leads to lower loss of biodiversity in forest areas, and it can have impacts on C pools and fluxes as less residues are produced per unit harvested wood product.  
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{{PolicyInterventionEffectTemplate
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Revision as of 15:19, 22 April 2014

Description: Increasing the share of produced wood yielded with Reduced Impact Logging (RIL) practices instead of conventional logging practices.
Reference: PBL, 2010;
Is implemented in: Forest management
Associated theme items: Forestry (Land use)


Associated policy response component

Component: Land and biodiversity policies
Page: Land and biodiversity policies/Forestry sector

Effects of this policy intervention on components

Component: Forest management
Effect : RIL leads to lower loss of biodiversity in forest areas, and it can have impacts on C pools and fluxes as less residues are produced per unit harvested wood product.

Component: Natural vegetation and carbon cycle
Effect : RIL can change the volume of the C pools in the soil and vegetation pools and reduces the human induced land-use change emissions.

Component: Terrestrial biodiversity
Effect : The impacts on biodiversity is lower using RIL practices instead of the conventional practices. This because (i) less forets will be used (higher biodiversity on large scale); (ii) a better and faster regrowth of the harvested forests, also thus a long-term increasing biodiversity also within these forests.