4.5 Article

How many people globally actually use non-timber forest products?

Journal

FOREST POLICY AND ECONOMICS
Volume 135, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.forpol.2021.102659

Keywords

Global north; Global south; Non-wood forest products; Rural; Urban; Users

Funding

  1. South African Research Chairs Initiative of the Department of Science and Innovation
  2. National Research Foundation of South Africa [84379]

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Non-timber forest products (NTFPs) play a crucial role in household subsistence, income, and culture, contributing to human wellbeing. Global estimates show that there are between 3.5 billion and 5.76 billion NTFP users worldwide, highlighting the importance of these products in various socio-economic and geographic regions. This underscores the need for more focus on supply, management, conservation, and safeguarding of NTFPs in sectoral and development policies.
Non-timber forest products (NTFPs) are widely used wild, biological products harvested from rural and urban landscapes for household subsistence, income and culture, thereby contributing to human wellbeing. Estimates of the numbers of people making use of, or being dependent on, NTFPs vary widely, and global estimates to date have excluded urban populations and also NTFP users in the Global North. Additionally, most global or continental estimates are two or more decades old, and hence do not account for significant worldwide changes in societies, cultures, economies and landscapes since the estimates were made. Here we collate more recent empirical studies reporting the number of NTFP users at fine scales that we extrapolate up for three broad regions, viz. rural areas of the Global South, urban areas of the Global South, and the Global North, as the basis for estimating the number of NTFP users globally. We calculate the lower and upper bounds, as well a median estimate. We find the lowest and median approximations to be 3.5 billion and 5.76 billion users globally, respectively, based on conservative approaches. This is more than double and triple, respectively, the oft cited and dated figure of 1.6 billion. Moreover, we find that only half of the global NTFP users are located in rural regions of the Global South, and that the other half are in urban areas and the Global North, showing that NTFPs are of importance across socio-economic and geographic regions, not just in remote and underdeveloped villages of the Global South. With such large numbers of users around the world, it is imperative that the supply, management, conservation and safeguarding of the values of NTFPs take a more central place in sectoral and development policies.

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