Turkey integrates climate change in its forest policy

Turkey integrates climate change in its forest policy

AFD has granted a new €150m loan to the Turkish government to support its forest policy. This money comes with an ambitious programme of technical assistance to help put in place a plan to adapt the forests to climate change and integrate biodiversity into forest policy. 

Turkey has one of the largest forest areas in Europe. Its 22.3 million hectares of forested land contribute not only to the economy through timber harvesting, eco-tourism, etc., but also to water quality, flood prevention and climate change mitigation.

The country is well aware of the asset its forests represent, and in 2008 embarked on an ambitious forest policy with the aim of increasing its forest cover from 27 to 30% by 2023. AFD was quick to support this project: between 2012 and 2018, it made three loans to the Turkish treasury for a total amount of €450m.

The new two-year funding agreement signed on 17 April 2019 follows on from the previous ones. In total, the aid provided will have contributed to the reforesting or rehabilitation of almost 1.3 million hectares of forest and to measures to protect against soil erosion on as much land again. But the partnership goes much further than that!

As for each of its three earlier loans, AFD will be accompanying this one by coordinating and funding contact between French experts and those of the Turkish General Directorate of Forestry. But this time, the technical assistance provision, which represents a donation of approximately €800,000, will be extended to encompass new themes and involve a wider range of French organisations.

This expanded cooperation should help the Turkish authorities to draw up, by 2020, a national climate change adaptation plan for the forests and a biodiversity roadmap, with the aim of making these issues strategic elements in their forest policy.

With global warming, the pressure on Turkey’s forests has increased. They are no longer only threatened by the development of human activities. They are suffering from more frequent forest fires, long periods of drought and multiplication in the number of forest pests.

This work will also be of interest to France, since Turkey’s climate offers, to some extent, a foretaste of what the French climate could become in a few decades’ time and therefore of what its forests might be expected to have to cope with.

Original source: AFD
Published on 07 May 2019