Become an OC Media MemberSupport independent journalism in the Caucasus:
Join Today
Media logo
Environment

Watchdogs: Georgian Forest Fund lost 500 square kilometers in 5 years

Photo: Shota Kincha/OC Media
Photo: Shota Kincha/OC Media

A new report from a coalition of environmental and rights groups casts doubt on Georgia’s recent commitment to sustainable forest management. 

In a joint press conference on 26 November, the Caucasus Environmental NGO Network (CENN), Human Rights Centre, and the Green Movement of Georgia have reported that the Georgian Forest Fund has lost 500 km² of forested territory over the last five years.

The area is equal to more than half of the size of the Borjomi-Kharagauli National Park, the largest in Georgia. 

The three organisations reported that, according to their joint study, between 2016-2021, 18,000 separate forest plots have been transferred from Georgia’s Forest Fund into private ownership, including businesses and the Patriarchate of Georgian Orthodox Church, and ownership by local municipalities. Since the transfer of ownership, ‘persistent’ felling of trees has been underway.

These plots reportedly included ‘ecosystems of high market value’, and their transfer allegedly circumvented Georgian laws that regulate forestry and the executive bodies responsible for enforcing them, primarily the Georgian Environmental Protection Ministry.

In their joint appeal, CENN, Human Rights Centre, and Green Movement of Georgia demanded Georgian authorities ‘immediate halt’ on delisting state-owned forests from the Forest Fund. 

They also urged the lawmakers to come up with laws to curtail logging on forest lands already transferred to the private entities, ‘taking immediate steps’ to restore their forest status and appealed to all recently elected mayors to suspend and revise all their previous decisions. 

OC Media reached out to the Environmental Protection Ministry and its National Forestry Agency for comment. 

‘Registrations that are still ongoing should be stopped somehow’, Nino Chkhobadze, Chair of Greens Movement of Georgia / Friends of the Earth – Georgia insisted during the press conference on Friday. Photo: Shota Kincha/OC Media.

Degradation not reforestation

According to the report, forest area reductions that took place throughout the last five years are 12 times bigger than the area that Georgia had committed to restoring in the Nationally Determined Contribution document (NDC) following the 2015 Paris Agreement that Georgia joined in 2017. 

‘We promised the international community to develop 4,000 hectares [40 square kilometres] of forest but we are degrading 50,000 hectares [50 square kilometres] of forest instead’, Nana Janashia, Executive Director of CENN, said during the press conference. 

The Paris Agreement is a legally binding international climate change treaty based on the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. Upon ratifying it, each country commits to following the individual NDC as its national agenda. Earlier this year, Georgia adopted an updated NDC.

According to the latest NDC, by 2030 Georgia committed to ‘maintaining and increasing the GHG [greenhouse gases] absorption and adaptation capacities of forests’ and by 2030, to ‘increasing the carbon capturing capacity through the forestry sector by 10% compared to the 2015 level’.

Policies aimed at scaling back deforestation and forest degradation activities are considered to be among the key priorities for the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions.

Last year, Georgia also adopted a new Forest Code that Environmental Protection and Agriculture Minister Levan Davitashvili promised would ‘support the ecological stability of forest ecosystems, enhance the socio-economic benefits for the public and reduce the pressure on forests’.

Aleko Tskitishvili. Photo: Shota Kincha/OC Media

Social impact

The alleged mass reduction and unlawful appropriation of forests and their environmental degradation, Georgian green policy advocates warned on Friday, constituted a ‘profitless’, ‘unproductive squandering’ of public property ‘in detriment of Georgia’s economic development, including ecotourism’ and elevated risks for corruption.

Aleko Tskitishvili, Director of Human Rights Center, stressed that unlawful and mass forest privatisation directly led to the violation of the environmental rights of local residents.

Human Rights Center lawyers have reportedly challenged transfers greenlit by various local authorities throughout Georgia. However, due to protracted judicial proceedings, Tskitishvili said, they would ‘not be able to stop this process’. 

He also warned that there was an upcoming initiative from the Parliamentary Committee on Environment and Natural Resources mulling amending Article 13 of the Forest Code of Georgia that could allow stripping a plot of its forest status if an investor proposes to develop it for ‘resort and recreational purposes’. 

‘This is an additional threat […] that would lead to additional delisting of areas from Forest Fund’, Tskitishvili stressed. 

Related Articles

Residents of Shukruti hold banners during the protest in front of the Georgian parliament on 11 September. Photo: Tata Shoshiashvili/OC Media.
Chiatura Manganese Mines

Mining company files 30 new lawsuits against Shukruti residents

O

Manganese mining company Magharoeli LLC has filed lawsuits against 30 residents in the village of Shukruti, demanding that the residents pay a total of ₾5.5 million ($2.1 million), as well as restricting their property rights.  The Shukruti residents’ lawyer,  Lado Kutateladze, told OC Media that they only found out about the lawsuits on Monday, adding that this latest series of cases aimed to pressure Shukruti residents to end their protest against mining operations under their village.

Residents of Shukruti hold a banner saying ‘To save village Shukruti’. Photo: Tata Shoshiashvili/OC Media.
Chiatura Manganese Mines

Shukruti residents arrive in Tbilisi to continue protest against manganese mining

O

Demonstrators from Shukruti, who have been protesting for almost six months to raise awareness of the damage caused by manganese mining under their village, have moved their protest to Tbilisi. Police did not allow them to set up their tent in front of the parliament building. On Wednesday evening, several dozen demonstrators arrived in Tbilisi from the village of Shukruti, west Georgia. They asked the state to pay attention to their problems and their protest. Residents of Shukruti have bee

Joseph Sikulu at COP28. Official photo
Azerbaijan

Tongan activist hits out at Azerbaijan’s environmental record ahead of COP29

A

A Tongan activist has lashed out at Azerbaijan’s climate record ahead of the COP29 UN climate summit in Baku. Joseph Zane Sikulu, an activist from the Pacific Basin Climate Movement made the comments in an open letter to the President of COP29, Mukhtar Babayev, a former oil executive at SOCAR. In the letter, Sikulu introduced himself as a native Tongan, noting that Babayev recently visited the islands of Tonga to participate in the 53rd Pacific Islands Forum. ‘You visited my home island la

Jumber Tsutskiridze, Giorgi Bitsadze and Amiran Shekiladze sewed their mouths on Sunday. Photo: Mariam Nikuradze/OC Media.
Chiatura Manganese Mines

Three in Shukruti sew lips shut in protest against manganese mining

Avatar

On Sunday, three protesters from the village of Shukruti sewed their lips shut in an attempt to attract attention to their protest against the damage manganese mining is causing to their homes. This latest action follows more than five months of continuous protest by local residents. Sunday morning was gloomy in the protest tent. People had been gathering since the early hours, knowing that some of the protesters had made the decision to take the extreme measure of sewing their lips shut.  W

Most Popular

Editor‘s Picks