Caring for our forests globally
National Sites
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National Standards

In keeping with the idea of "Think Globally, Act Locally", PEFC requires that all national standards developed meet PEFC International's Sustainability Benchmark.

sfm1This “bottom-up” approach ensures that standards meet the expectations of stakeholders on the ground, address local conditions, and are consistent with national laws and regulations, while at the same time meeting international benchmarks and being internationally recognized.

This ensures that standards are wholly adaptable to different sets of circumstances.

Adaptability is of major significance in forest management as, for example:

  • Sustainable forest management of temperate forests in Europe or North America requires different approaches from that of tropical forests in Africa, Asia or South America as different tree species and different climatic, socio-economic, cultural, and environmental conditions require different management methods.
  • Functions and benefits that forests are expected to deliver vary widely. More than 1.6 billion people depend directly on forests for their livelihoods, especially in developing countries thereby making shared access to forest resources crucial, while in some developed countries, recreational activities are among the key benefits provided by forests.
  • Traditions, culture and management capacities and systems differ both within and among countries.
  • Legislative, administrative and governance frameworks and capacities vary between and among countries requiring approaches that make best use of existing structures.

treetopTo ensure consistency across all PEFC-endorsed standards, all national systems undergo National forest certification systems wishing to be PEFC recognized must comply with PEFC’s Sustainability Benchmark.

To ensure consistency across all PEFC-endorsed standards, all national systems undergo rigorous independent assessment to ensure their compliance with our strict international criteria.

This process ensures forests certified under the respective national standards are "certified once, accepted everywhere", which is of vital importance for the trading realities in a globalized world.

PEFC criteria, regulations and guidelines also include provisions for standards development and implementation, and define requirements for stakeholder engagement in standard setting and scheme development; regional and group certification, certification and accreditation procedures, Chain of Custody, Logo Use, and complaints and appeals mechanism.

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PEFC Certified

Forests area: 221 million ha
Forest owners: > 476.000
Companies (CoC): 6.259

(January 2010)
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Public Consultations

Comment and feedback on assessments and document revisions.

PEFC Membership/Status

ecosoc

ECOSOC Consultative Status

unfccc

UNFCCC Observer

iucn

IUCN Member

iaf

IAF Accreditation Body Member