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New York Times reports on recent RRI partnership in Mexico
As reported by the New York Times on 22 November 2010.
*The following correction to the below article was printed on 1 December 2010:
“The
Ixtlán de Juárez Journal article on Nov. 23, about successful forest
conservation by the Zapotec Indians in the mountains around Ixtlán de
Juárez in southern Mexico’s Oaxaca state, misattributed the source of a
study that reported local communities like the Zapotec are now managing
more than a quarter of the forests in developing countries. The study
was done by the Rights and Resources Initiative, a nonprofit advocacy
group based in Washington that promotes increased community ownership of
forests in developing countries; it was not by the Center for
International Forestry Research, a nonprofit conservation group based in
Bogor, Indonesia.”
.................................................................................................
Growing a Forest, and Harvesting Jobs
By Elisabeth Malkin
IXTLáN
de JUáREZ, Mexico — As an unforgiving midday sun bore down on the
pine-forested mountains here, a half-dozen men perched across a steep
hillside wrestled back mounds of weeds to uncover wisps of knee-high
seedlings.
Freeing the tiny pines that were planted
last year is only one step of many the town takes to nurture the trees
until they grow tall, ready for harvesting in half a century. But the
people of Ixtlán take the long view.
“We’re the
owners of this land and we have tried to conserve this forest for our
children, for our descendants,” Alejandro Vargas said, leaning on his
machete as he took a break. “Because we have lived from this for many
years.”
Three decades ago the Zapotec Indians here
in the state of Oaxaca in southern Mexico fought for and won the right
to communally manage the forest. Before that, state-owned companies had
exploited it as they pleased under federal government concessions.
They
slowly built their own lumber business and, at the same time, began
studying how to protect the forest. Now, the town’s enterprises employ
300 people who harvest timber, produce wooden furniture and care for the
woodlands, and Ixtlán has grown to become the gold standard of
community forest ownership and management, international forestry
experts say.
Mexico’s community forest enterprises
now range from the mahogany forests of the Yucatán Peninsula to the
pine-oak forests of the western Sierra Madre. About 60 businesses,
including Ixtlán, are certified by the Forest Stewardship Council in
Germany, which evaluates sustainable forestry practices. Between 60 and
80 percent of Mexico’s remaining forests are under community control,
according to Sergio Madrid of the Mexican Civic Council for Sustainable
Forestry.
“It’s astounding what’s going on in
Mexico,” said David Barton Bray, an expert on community forestry at
Florida International University who has studied Ixtlán.
The
Mexican government plans to showcase its success in community forestry
at the global climate talks in Cancún next week. Despite fractious
negotiations over reducing carbon emissions, talks on paying developing
countries to protect their forests have moved further ahead than most
other issues.
In developing countries, where the
rule of law is weak and enforcement spotty, simply declaring a forest
off-limits does little to prevent illegal logging or clearing land for
agriculture or development. “Unless local communities are committed to
conserving and protecting forests it’s not going to happen,” said David
Kaimowitz, a former director of the Center for International Forestry
Research, or Cifor, who is now at the Ford Foundation. “Government can’t
do it for them.”
A recent Cifor study reported that
more than a quarter of the forests in developing countries are now
being managed by local communities. The trend is worldwide — from China
to Brazil.
In Ixtlán, under Zapotec traditions, all
decisions about the forest and its related businesses are made by a
(mostly male) general assembly of 390 townspeople. These “comuneros” are
required to contribute their labor as needed to the forest and its
enterprises.
“You can see the harmony,” said
Francisco Luna, the secretary of the committee in charge of the forest
and its businesses. “For us to live in peace, we have to respect all the
rules.”
Many of the problems that beset other
forests in Mexico, like illegal logging and deforestation, rate barely a
shrug here. Pedro Vidal García, a longtime forester in Ixtlán who now
works for the Rainforest Alliance, laughed when he was asked about
illegal logging in the 48,000 acres of forest the community owns.
“Anybody
who tries their own illegal business is harshly judged,” he said. “The
assembly is very tough.” A comunero who dares to work as a guide to
illegal loggers or hunters is branded a traitor and could lose all
property rights.
Rule by an assembly of equals based
on ancestral customs can make running a business unwieldy. “It takes a
long time to agree,” said Mr. García, whose father was one of the
generation that sold their livestock to set up the community’s first
sawmill. “The assembly can turn emotional, or technical.”
Last
year, the community’s businesses made a profit of about $230,000. Of
that, 30 percent went back into the business, another 30 percent went
into forest preservation and the final 40 percent went back to the
workers and the community where it pays for things like pensions, a
low-interest credit union and housing for students studying in the state
capital. Most of the enterprise’s foresters and managers are the
university-educated sons and daughters of the older comuneros.
It
is an odd business mixture, acknowledged Alberto Belmonte, who is in
charge of finding new markets for the furniture and lumber that Ixtlán
and two neighboring towns produce. “Pure simple socialism, which is what
the communities have, and an idea of capitalism, where we say, ‘You
know what? We have to be profitable.’”
Many of
Ixtlán{minute}s plain pine pieces are sold to the state government, and
the factory is busy filling an order to furnish a children’s home with
bunk beds and lockers. Mr. Belmonte has plans to jazz up design and
crack the Mexico City market.
Julio García Gómez,
31, a sawmill worker, came back to Ixtlán five years ago from New
Jersey, where he was working illegally, to raise his young family. The
pay here has gone up since he returned, he said, “because of the
equipment, because of the training.”
While a
self-sustaining business, Ixtlán is still a work in progress.
Nongovernment organizations, as well as the Mexican government, all
provide financing and advice. And even the strongest advocates of
community forestry acknowledge that it is not the answer to protecting
forests everywhere. It works best in areas that produce quality timber,
Mr. Bray said.
But it is a huge improvement on what came before.
“Things
are working,” said Francisco Chapela, an agronomist who first came to
Oaxaca 30 years ago and now works for the Rainforest Alliance in Mexico.
“Forest management is a big success,” he continued. “If you look at old
aerial photographs and compare it with what is now, the forest is
increasing here.
“A lot of jobs have been created and a lot of money has come to the communities.”
Posted By Lopaka Purdy at 2:46pm on November 23, 2010
Comments: 0
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