European forests under heavy pressure from climate change

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A newly published article by Nabuurs et al. introduces a next-generation information tool which can help making the best decisions for European forests. Dr Helga Pülzl from Forest Policy Research Network is coauthor of this article.

European forests are now heavily suffering from climate change. Latest reports state that mortality in spruce forests alone will amount to 100 million m³ this year. Furthermore, European forests face challenges with declining biodiversity, but also rising new demands in the so-called bio-economy. A next-generation information tool, presented by the team of authors led by Dr Gert-Jan Nabuurs from EFI member organisation, Wageningen Environmental Research, can help making the best decisions for European forests.

Currently there is no comprehensive information system that keeps track of recent trends at the EU scale, nor is there a common and strong European forest policy in place. Forest-related regulations at the EU level are fragmented and uncoordinated on various issues like climate mitigation, bioenergy provision, and nature conservation.

European Union forest policy

A novel European Union forest policy based on the best and most up-to-date information available is urgently needed. Without such change, forests will not provide the renewable resources we need, but will suffer more heavily under climate change in the future. Forest inventories and many information sources exist in all countries, but are not used in European Union policymaking to their full extent.

Next-generation information tool

The research team introduces a next-generation information tool that portrays a novel European forest management strategies map, spatially weighing the multi-functionality of European forests as one first step towards better information use and thus better policy support and decisions.

Download the article here.

Full reference: Nabuurs, G-J., Verweij, P., Van Eupen, M., Pérez-Soba, M., Pülzl, H., & Hendriks, K. 2019. Next-generation information to support a sustainable course for European forests. Nature Sustainability, Vol. 2, pp. 815–818.

 

Source: WUR website