
Experts estimate that around 100,000 hectares of forests are left completely unprotected. According to Global Forest Watch, Serbia lost the largest area of forest in 2023 over the past two decades.
A fundamental prerequisite for protecting forests and improving their condition is having an entity responsible for managing them in accordance with forestry regulations.
However, in Serbia, thousands of hectares of communal and state-owned forests have no designated manager, governed by uncertain legal frameworks.
The TV loop aims to identify and take action against instances of false claims or other violations of FSC requirements.
The scope of this Eurasia birch wood panels TV loop is:
- Geographic areas: China and central and eastern European countries (Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Estonia, Georgia, Greece, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, and Ukraine).
- Product type: Plywood
- Species: Birch (Betula)
Serbia’s forests face a triple threat: illegal logging, commercial logging, and a stalling reforestation campaign.
Click here to access the Global Illegal Logging and Associated Trade (ILAT) Risk assessment tool and to download the Forest Trends User Guide describing the functionality of the ILAT Risk Data Tool.
Click here to access the Cattle Data Tool.