Setting the Scene
POST-INAUGURAL SESSION
After
the inaugural session, presentations were made by various participants.
Presentation
by Dr. R. C. Sharma,
|
|
Dr. R.C. Sharma highlighted aspects like prerequisites, opportunities,
challenges, action programme etc., through his opening presentation. Ecological,
socio-cultural and economic sustainability, appropriate entitlement regime,
non-destructive harvesting, value addition etc., were cited as prerequisites.
Tracibility, clarity in tenurial rights, improved income generation were
possible opportunities arising out of the process of certification. Challenges
included addressing wide and remote dispersion of collector's, definition of
sustainability, user conflicts etc. He
opined that poverty is a complex phenomenon and hence poverty may not be judged
solely by the income levels of the people. It is rather a question of
socio-cultural, economic and ecological well-being. He hoped that through
certification, the forest dependent people will have better prospects because
basic objective of the state is to unlock forest resources for enhanced
well-being of the people. |
Though a new state, the geographical area of Chhattisgarh is approximately 4 sq.km more than the total area of Haryana, Punjab and Kerala put together. Chhattisgarh is the third largest forested state in the country. With such a vast forest cover, our responsibilities associated with managing these resources have also increased. Therefore, certification of non-wood forest produce coming out from these forests becomes one of the priority areas which the state has identified.
There are
certain prerequisites for certification programme.
Community controlled resources
Organic production
Traceability / chain of custody
Benefit sharing mechanisms
Non-destructive Harvesting
Value addition
Socio-cultural matrix
Green marketing
Quality control mechanisms
|
Please click on the following figures to move onto the respective page - |
||||||||||||||
|
|10| |
||||||||||||||