The CELOS Management System (CMS) is a system for harvesting tropical rainforests which aims to cause minimal disturbance to the ecosystem while also providing economic return. CMS was developed by the Centre for Agricultural Research in Suriname (CELOS) and the Agricultural University of Wageningen (The Netherlands; nowadays WUR). Starting in the 1960/70s, it was originally developed for Suriname, but has gained international recognition.
18 January, 2012The economic structure of Vietnam has drastically shifted since the mid 1980's from an agriculture based system to one that is multi-based.
09 January, 2012More and more markets are demanding legal verification of timber products, e.g. the EU with its Timber Regulation and the US with its Lacey Act. The EU and VS are important export destinations for Viet Nam’s timber products (more than 80% of total export revenue). In the report “How Viet Nam is prepared to meet legal requirements of timber export markets” TBI aims to provide some initial assessments of the impacts of these emerging market requirements.
Tropenbos International unites numerous partners behind a single objective: to ensure that knowledge is used effectively in the formulation of appropriate policies and managing forests for conservation and sustainable development.
As an intermediary organization we link the demand for knowledge and capacity building from policy makers and forest users with research and capacity in the North and South. As facilitator we foster multi-stakeholder dialogues as an effective means of communicating information needs, expertise, issues and solutions for forests and forest-dependent people.
Our efforts are geared to obtaining five results that will help us to achieve our objective and fulfil our mission:
To make good forest policies and wise use of forests we need good quality information. But good information and knowledge will only lead to better policies and wise use of forests if the research programmes designed to generate this information and knowledge meet certain requirements:
A precondition for the effective uptake of research results is the existence of a properly functioning forest sector in the partner countries. Without such an enabling environment it is unlikely that information and knowledge - the product of good research - will benefit forest users and policy makers.
For that reason, TBI invites key forest users and policy makers to become members of the bi-national steering committees in each of the countries where we work. TBI operates as a platform for discussing and identifying priorities for the forest sector, with an emphasis on those that require information or institutional capacity. This feature of our programme ensures that we are well-connected with the forest sector and that the sector has a say in setting the objectives of each programme and in its governance.
For institutions and organizations to function better, two things are important. First, they need good information to make better decisions on forest use and conservation. This should preferably be coordinated with regional development plans, national forest programmes (NFPs) and national poverty reduction strategies (PRSPs). Second, organizations need staff capable of identifying information needs, designing research strategies to obtain such information, and using this information.
This philosophy is reflected in the following features of our strategy: