Forestry

©FAO Jeanette Van Acker

European Forestry Commission

Created in 1947, the European Forestry Commission (EFC) is one of six Regional Forestry Commissions established by FAO to provide a policy and technical forum for countries to discuss and address forest issues on a regional basis. It meets every two years.

The EFC has a number of associated subsidiary bodies, including the Working Party on the Management of Mountain Watersheds, UNECE/FAO Working Party on Forest Statistics, Economics and Management; and seven UNECE/FAO Teams of Specialists.

FAO encourages wide participation of government officials from forestry and other sectors as well as representatives of international, regional and subregional organizations that deal with forest-related issues in the region, including NGOs, and the private sector.
Sessions
Year Meeting Title Meeting Report
1967
Rome (Italy), 14/05/1967 - 18/05/1967
1963
Geneva (Switzerland), 29/09/1963 - 06/11/1962
1961
Rome (Italy), 21/05/1961 - 29/05/1961
1959
Florence (Italy), 06/07/1959 - 12/07/1959
1957
Rome (Italy), 06/05/1957 - 13/05/1957
News
07/11/2025
FAO has welcomed the launch of the Call to Action on Integrated Fire Management and Wildfire Resilience today at the Belém Climate Summit ahead of the 2025 UN Climate Change Conference (COP30) in Belém, Brazil.
What if cities were redesigned for people – and the planet?
31/10/2025

Increasingly, cities around the world are ready to expand green spaces, plan sustainable housing and transport, participate in the production of healthy food, use water resources better, and link all the above to their economies. FAO's Forestry Director Zhimin Wu explains in this op-ed for World Cities Day.

European Forestry Commission (EFC)
22/10/2025
The European Forestry Commission will meet in Istanbul, Türkiye, from 22 to 25 October to review and coordinate regional strategies on forests and the forest industry, with a specific focus on innovation.
21/10/2025
Deforestation has slowed in all of the world’s regions in the last decade, according to the Global Forest Resources Assessment 2025. Released every five years, the 2025 edition was published today during the Global Forest Observations Initiative Plenary in Bali, Indonesia.