H istory of the Forest Declaration Assessment The Forest Declaration Assessment a comprehensive civil society-led effort to assess collective progress toward global forest goals. The Forest Declaration Assessment annually publishes rigorously researched and peer-reviewed progress assessment reports on the state of global forests. Our critical, evidence-based analyses highlight the gaps and point to solutions to overcome inertia, countervailing economic forces, and other barriers to progress. The information that the Forest Declaration Assessment collects and publishes every year supports planning to ensure that 2030 forests goals can be met through a coordinated and collaborative effort of governments, corporations, and civil society. The history of the Forest Declaration Assessment When the New York Declaration on Forests (NYDF) was adopted in 2014, it launched without a built-in mechanism for monitoring and accountability. Out of that gap, the NYDF Progress Assessment was born. C
What is the New York Declaration on Forests? The New York Declaration on Forests (NYDF) is a political declaration calling for global action to protect and restore forests. It offers a common, multi-stakeholder framework for forest action, consolidating various initiatives and objectives that drive forest protection, restoration, and sustainable use. Adopted in 2014, the NYDF is the major reference point for global forest action. Its ten goals include halting natural forest loss by 2030, restoring 350 million hectares of degraded landscapes and forestlands, improving governance, increasing forest finance, and reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation as part of a post-2020 global climate agreement. If you are interested in endorsing the NYDF or learning more, click here. There are currently over 200 endorsers, including: national governments, sub-national governments, multi-national companies, Indigenous Peoples and local community organizations, non-governmental