Forest Connect: linking small and medium forest enterprises to markets and services

About this project

Background 

Small and medium forest enterprises (SMFEs) are critical to the poor. They generate local wealth, help to secure local resources and environmental accountability, promote local creativity and help to preserve indigenous cultures and market niches. But while the number of SMFEs starting up in least developed countries is high, keeping them going sustainably is a major challenge. They face problems such as too much bureaucracy, unstable policies and regulations, insecure land rights, lack of bargaining power, insufficient business knowledge and difficulties accessing credit, market information and technology.

Many SMFEs work together in associations to reduce transaction costs, adapt to new market opportunities and shape the policy environment in their favour. But in least developed countries, support structures for such forest associations either do not exist or fail to reach those who need help most.

Location 

This project includes acivities in Burkina Faso, China, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guatemala, Guyana, Lao PDR, Mali, Mozambique and Nepal.

Aims 

The central aim of this alliance is to connect SMFEs to national forest programmes (empowering SMFEs to be heard by policy makers), emerging markets (by supporting existing SMFE associations) and service providers (strengthening their capacity to provide training and finance).

Contact 

Duncan Macqueen duncan.macqueen@iied.org

Funded by 

UK Department for International Development, Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation and the Norwegian Government (through a funding agreement with FAO’s Community-based Forest Enterprise Development programme)