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Applying Reduced Impact Logging to Advance Sustainable Forest Management
Asia-Pacific Forestry Commission
International Conference Proceedings
26 February to 1 March 2001
Kuching, Malaysia
Edited by
Thomas Enters
Patrick B. Durst
Grahame B. Applegate
Peter C.S. Kho
Gary Man
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific
Bangkok, Thailand
2002
Table of Contents
The designations employed and the presentation of material inthis publication do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on thepart of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations concerningthe legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities,or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. |
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may bereproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by anymeans, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the permissionof the copyright owner. Applications for such permission, with a statement ofthe purpose and extent of the reproduction, should be addressed to the SeniorForestry Officer, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations,Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific, 39 Phra Atit Road, Bangkok,Thailand.
Cover photos: Kuswata Kartawinata, Francis Ng, ReidarPersson and Thomas Enters
For copies of the report, write to:
Patrick B. Durst
Senior Forestry Officer
FAO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific
39 Phra Atit Road
Bangkok 10200
Thailand
Tel: (66-2) 697 4000
Fax: (66-2) 697 4445
Email:[email protected]
© FAO 2002
ISBN 974-7946-23-8
Foreword
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction - Thomas Enters andPatrick B. Durst
2. Reduced impact logging: conceptsand issues - Dennis P. Dykstra
3. Impediments to the adoption ofreduced impact logging in the Indonesian corporate sector - A.W.Klassen
4. Helicopter harvesting in the hillmixed dipterocarp forests of Sarawak - Danny Chua Kee Hui
5. Forest harvesting roads: meetingoperational, social and environmental needs with efficiency and economy - C.H.Wells
6. Reduced impact logging in Bhutan- Ugyen Thinley
7. Simple measures with substantialimpact: implementing RIL in one forest concession in East Kalimantan - AlexanderHinrichs, Rolf Ulbricht, Budi Sulistioadi, Yosep Ruslim, Irwan Muchlis andDjwa Hui Lang
8. Why minimum diameter cuttingalone cannot fit with RIL objectives - Plinio Sist, Jean-Guy Bertault andNicolas Picard
9. Recent advances in trainingstrategy development in support of RIL implementation - Napoleon T.Vergara
10. Improving forest harvestingpractices through training and education - RossAndrewartha
11. Directional tree fellingtraining program: an associations approach - Peter C.S. Kho and BarneyS.T. Chan
12. Forest harvest training - TheSumalindo Project - D. Ed Aulerich and Jefri R. Sirait
13. Reduced impact logging: does itcost or does it pay? - Wulf Killmann, Gary Q. Bull, Olaf Schwab and Reino E.Pulkki
14. Financial assessment of reducedimpact logging techniques in Sabah, Malaysia - John Tay, John Healey and ColinPrice
15. Financial indicators of reducedimpact logging performance in Brazil: case study comparisons - Thomas P.Holmes, Frederick Boltz and Douglas R. Carter
16. Financial and economic analysesof conventional and reduced impact harvesting systems in Sarawak - Aaron AgoDagang, Frank Richter, B. Hahn-Schilling and PenguangManggil
17. Financial costs of reducedimpact timber harvesting in Indonesia: case study comparisons - Grahame B.Applegate
18. The financial benefits ofreduced impact logging: saving costs and the forest A case study from Labanan,East Kalimantan - Muhandis Natadiwirya and MarttiMatikainen
19. Improving occupational safetyand health: the International Labour Organizations contribution - PeterBlombäck
20. Safety and occupational healthin forestry operations in Australia - Changes in approach through time - RobertMcCormack
21. Reduced impact logging inSarawak, Guyana and Cameroon - the reasons behind differences in approach -W.B.J. Jonkers
22. Building partnerships -Tasmanias approach to sustainable forest management - Graham R.Wilkinson
23. Progress towards RIL adoption inBrazil and Bolivia: driving forces and implementation successes - Geoffrey M.Blate, Francis E. Putz and Johan C. Zweede
24. Implementing reduced impactlogging in the Alas Kusuma Group - Nana Suparna, Harimawan and GustiHardiansyah
25. Outcome-based regulations toencourage reduced impact logging - Chris P.A. Bennett
26. Trading forest carbon to promotethe adoption of reduced impactlogging - Joyotee Smith and GrahameApplegate
27. Addressing the gap between thetheory and practice of reduced impact logging - Simon Armstrong and ChrisInglis
28. Incremental cost of complyingwith criteria and indicators for achieving sustainable forest management - MohdShahwahid H.O., Awang Noor A.G., Ahmad Fauzi P., Abdul Rahim N., Salleh M.,Muhammad Farid, A.R., Mohammad Azmi M.I. and Amir S.
29. Policies, strategies andtechnologies for forest resource protection - William B. Magrath and RichardGrandalski
30. Cautious optimism but still along way to go - Thomas Enters and Patrick B. Durst
Back cover
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