Rural Europe on the move English_E_version_all | Page 67

In Loco - here in this place “We need to invest in the slow-growing, deeply rooted dry orchard and cork forests.” Forestry policy changes been reduced. We need to consider the environmental policy, for forests are crucial actors in the fight against climate change and biodiversity loss. A truly sustainable forest policy IN LOCO’s view is that we need needs to take this into consideration to move away from our addiction to and move away from comparatively fast-growing eucalyptus forests which instant-gratification eucalyptus. integrated rural development strategy produce dead landscapes and invest It requires long-term thinking articulates people, forest, cork, olive instead in the slow-growing, deeply and planning ahead. Sustainable oil, agriculture, livestock and their rooted dry orchard and cork forests. development takes time, it is not cultural and productive systems in a They will take more time but they a quick-fix and so we need to sustainable way. I have heard Forum will help us weather future storms. discourage political short-termism Synergies considers running one of We anticipate more wildfires in the and encourage slower, more deeply its sustainable forestry workshops in decades ahead as the landscape rooted development policy making. Portugal. That would be great.” becomes increasingly arid and we “Fortunately forest management is need to be prepared for this. Olive and now changing in the right direction, cork forests will improve our resilience but we are still 20 years away from to these shocks but sustainability recovering from the errors made takes time. in the past,” Artur says. “A truly OPPOSITE 7. Fires in eucalyptus forest in 2017 8. Resilient forests grow slowly THIS PAGE 9. Hiking in a cork oak forest PE OP LE ! With years of experience in the environmental sector and as a clerk of a rural Parish in England, Gwil Wren first encountered Forum Synergies in 2009 when he participated in workshops on ‘Sustainable Development in Lake Areas’, to find contacts with people who were actively promoting nature conservation. Since he joined Forum Synergies in 2011, he has taken part in different events in 10 European countries stretching from France to Ukraine. He is the leader of Forum Synergies’ forestry working group and co-organised workshops in his home village in 2016 but also in Serbia and Estonia. Inspired by meetings and discussions he picked up from Forum Synergies to accept that “everyone has a different point of view - farmers, nature conservationists, economists. But you can only really make a step forward and find a common ground when you talk to each other!” That’s what also influences his work for EuCAN, an NGO working for nature conservation in the UK and Europe. Gwil worked and lived in the countryside all his life. 63