Publication | Closed Access
Assessing illegal logging in Ghana
113
Citations
15
References
2008
Year
EngineeringEnvironmental LawForestryInformation ForensicsEnvironmental EconomicsForest GovernanceForest LivelihoodTimber SupplyMining ManagementAfrican DevelopmentPublic PolicyEconomicsForest Management RegulationsIllegal HarvestIllegal LoggingMoney LaunderingForest-related IndustryBusinessNatural Resource Economics
SUMMARY Although high on the international forest agenda, illegal logging is often ambiguously defined and there is considerable uncertainty about its quantitative and qualitative characteristics. This obscures assessments of its social, economic and environmental impacts and precludes informed policy conclusions. Through timber export statistics, estimates of the domestic timber consumption and official harvesting records, the extent of illegal logging and its breakdown to origin, felling agents and species groups is estimated for Ghana over the period 1996–2005 based on a definition that emphasises the violation of established forest management regulations. Of the total harvest, 70% or 2.3 – 2.7 million m3 annually is estimated to be illegally cut. Chainsaw operators, who supply most of the domestic lumber demand, account for two-thirds and the export oriented timber industry account for one-third of the illegal harvest. The most valuable timber species dominate the illegal harvest and they appear to or...
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