15 1.6 million households Bharat K. Pokharel, personal communication. The Leasehold Forestry Policy
of 2002 made provision for handing over national forests to the private sector. Five-year plans since 1980 have focused on a balance of production, halting forest degradation and
expanding social benefits with a strong emphasis on devolution to the local level and the private sector. More recently the trend has shifted towards conservation, protection and poverty alleviation
although these are not new themes. The recent Interim Constitution of Nepal 2007, states that “The state shall give priority to the protection of the environment and to the prevention of its further damage
due to physical development activities by increasing the awareness of the general public about environmental cleanliness, and the state shall also make arrangements for the special protection of rare
wildlife, the forests and the vegetation” GoN 2007. The constitution also makes provision for community involvement in forestry activities.
2.1.9. Papua New Guinea
A National Forest Policy had been in place in Papua New Guinea since 1990 and the Forestry Act since 1991 Hurahura 2008. The policy promoted forest conservation in particular, but was not
supported by the Forestry Act and no forests have been set aside for conservation since then. Prior to this the Forestry Ordinance 1936-1937 made provision for purchase of land and timber rights by the
government and for granting of licences over acquired resources and subsequent collection of related royalties from forestry activities. A number of policies pursuant to the National Forest Policy have
been drafted but not yet sanctioned by the government, e.g.: i Downstream Processing Policy; ii Reforestation Policy; and iii the Eco-forestry Policy. In line with the National Forest Policy, the
Forestry Act 1991 as amended is supported by the 1998 Forestry Regulations. In recognition of the importance of climate change the Forest Minister has issued directives for the formulation of a carbon
trade policy specific to the forestry sector.
The lack of a national land-use plan was identified as one of the reasons for poor management in areas designated for commercial forestry. In the absence of a national land-use plan the forestry sector has
been held responsible for poor land management practices conducted by other sectors Hurahura 2008. The 2005-2010 Medium-Term Development Plan aimed to promote commercial logging based
on the principles of sustainable development and conserving natural forest resources. However, the latter goal has been redundant in the face of rigorous pursuit of the first.
2.1.10. Philippines
In 1992, the Department of Environment and Natural Resources DENR issued an administrative order transferring harvesting in natural forest from old-growth forest to secondary forest FMB 2009.
This effectively banned logging in old-growth forest, and areas above 1 000 metres or with slopes of 50 percent or more. In the same year, Congress passed the National Integrated Protected Area System
or NIPAS law which provides for the establishment of an integrated protected areas system.
An executive order issued in 1995 established community-based forest management CBFM as the national strategy to ensure sustainable development of the nation’s forests. Communities were granted
tenure over the forest lands for an initial 25 years and renewable for another 25 years and are obligated to prepare and implement a management and development plan. The Strategic Action Plan SAP
1997-2020 of the DENR details strategies for implementing the CBFM programme FMB 2009. The 1997 Indigenous People Rights Act IPRA and the NIPAS law, although not policies as such, have
had a significant influence on forestry. The IPRA recognized the primary right of indigenous peoples to their ancestral lands, while the NIPAS law establishes protected areas and upholds the rights of
affected communities to participate in protected area management Castillo 2008.
A key reason for slow progress in Philippine forestry is the failure over almost 20 years to pass the Sustainable Forest Management Bill FMB 2009. Passage was stalled due to disagreement over
whether to allow commercial logging in the remaining natural forests Quintos-Natividad et al. 2003 see Box 2.5. As a result, the 1990 Master Plan for Forestry Development was not implemented,
although it is still used as a guide. The Revised Master Plan for Forestry Development for 2003-2015