Noticias
            
        
                    Publicado el 19 de julio de 2012 en Noticias
                                        
                        
                            
The low participation of the forestry   sector in Peruvian economy is explained because low added value of these products. The Agricultural department of Forestry and Wildlife, has found that of 8 million of m3 produced in 2010, approximately 90% is destined to firewood for the rural housing, which is one of the main agents of deforestation in the country. Only  800,000  m3  of  the  wood  produced (11%) passes through a transformation process to obtain products such as: parquet,   sawn woods, laminated  wood,  plywood  and carbon;  among  the  most important export  products. Ucayali, Loreto, Madre de Dios and Junín, are the four departments that concentrate more than 2/3 of the national production of wood products.
On the other hand, the high logistics costs, the lack of facilities and drying systems; and  the difficulty to access from   the   processing  centers to the forest areas, the deforestation and the illegal logging  has prevented   the  sector  to grow  at high rates  during  the  last decade. For instance, during the period 2000-2010 the forestry production growth was 1.2% per year, which is a low rate, compared   to GNP of same period (5.7%).
This small growth of the forestry sector is due to low productivity, as shown in the report of the National Forestry Chamber where more than 70% of the forestry concessions have productions   lower than 2 m3 Has per year, while the certified concessions produce an average of 5 m3 Has per year. This is also considered to be low compared to 20 to 25 m3 Has per year that could be produced with special conditions such as technology and investment. Studies made by the Forest Stewardship   Council (FSC) show that improving the levels of production to 27 m3 Has per year, can give to the country an income of 7,087 million dollars per year.
On the other hand, the exports of wood products has been pretty dynamic the last ten years, with  an average growth rate of 13.2% per year, which means that it has increased 3 times during  2000-2010. The main destination for forestry exports are China, United States and Mexico; and the main products are parquet, paper & cardboard and sawn woods.
 
* Written by Cesar Peñaranda, Executive Director of the Economic and Development Institute of the Commerce Chamber of Lima.                        
                    
                                        
                                                                    
                    
                        
                    
                
                
            Potential of the Forestry Sector in Peru
Potential of the Forestry Sector in Peru
Economic Report
Lima’s Chamber of Commerce
Forestry Sector in Peru has a Big Development Potential * One of the activities with large potential in Peru is forestry because of the advantages related to the extension of natural forest (94% in the jungle region), our jungle is the second position in Latin America, after Brazil, and the ninth position worldwide. It has an extension of 68 million of ha, of which 38 million are adequate for forestry production. Despite of this potential, the forestry activity is far from being exploited because only 9.7 million Has, are currently used in a steady way among forestry concessions managed by the private sector for productive activities, ecotourism and conservation. Furthermore, of about 2,500 wood species found in Peru, around 600 species have been classified and only 195 are used. This can be seen in the poor contribution of the forestry sector to the economic activity in Peru, which reach only 1.1% of the GNP (1,700 million dollars to 2010), towards the quantity registered in Chile (2.6%), Bolivia (2.7%) or Ecuador (2.3%), which are countries with less extension of forest, as the estimates of the United Nation Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
The low participation of the forestry   sector in Peruvian economy is explained because low added value of these products. The Agricultural department of Forestry and Wildlife, has found that of 8 million of m3 produced in 2010, approximately 90% is destined to firewood for the rural housing, which is one of the main agents of deforestation in the country. Only  800,000  m3  of  the  wood  produced (11%) passes through a transformation process to obtain products such as: parquet,   sawn woods, laminated  wood,  plywood  and carbon;  among  the  most important export  products. Ucayali, Loreto, Madre de Dios and Junín, are the four departments that concentrate more than 2/3 of the national production of wood products.
On the other hand, the high logistics costs, the lack of facilities and drying systems; and  the difficulty to access from   the   processing  centers to the forest areas, the deforestation and the illegal logging  has prevented   the  sector  to grow  at high rates  during  the  last decade. For instance, during the period 2000-2010 the forestry production growth was 1.2% per year, which is a low rate, compared   to GNP of same period (5.7%).

This small growth of the forestry sector is due to low productivity, as shown in the report of the National Forestry Chamber where more than 70% of the forestry concessions have productions   lower than 2 m3 Has per year, while the certified concessions produce an average of 5 m3 Has per year. This is also considered to be low compared to 20 to 25 m3 Has per year that could be produced with special conditions such as technology and investment. Studies made by the Forest Stewardship   Council (FSC) show that improving the levels of production to 27 m3 Has per year, can give to the country an income of 7,087 million dollars per year.
On the other hand, the exports of wood products has been pretty dynamic the last ten years, with  an average growth rate of 13.2% per year, which means that it has increased 3 times during  2000-2010. The main destination for forestry exports are China, United States and Mexico; and the main products are parquet, paper & cardboard and sawn woods.
 
* Written by Cesar Peñaranda, Executive Director of the Economic and Development Institute of the Commerce Chamber of Lima.