Reducing deforestation and forest degradation, restoring forests, and sustainably managing forests are all critical pathways to meeting the 2030 global goals. Since 1990, more than 420 million hectares of forest have disappeared. Although deforestation rates have slowed, 10 million hectares of forest are still lost every year. World leaders have committed to halting deforestation and restoring more than 1 billion hectares of degraded land. However, progress has been hindered due to the lack of information at various levels.
Partners
Leading the way to more effective forest monitoring
To address such challenges, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland have launched AIM4Forests, a five-year programme that aims to support forest monitoring based on modern monitoring technologies and technical innovation, as well as the use of space data and remote sensing.
The new programme is all about leveraging technical innovation to create data and information to inform the right courses of action to reduce deforestation and restore forests. AIM4Forests will leverage everything that technology and innovation offers such as artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning. In addition, it will also make sure that the capacity is transferred to countries, including IPs and local communities who manage the forests – only that way can we see real change.
Highlights
AIM4Forests Impact Report 2023/24
Click here to discover last year's AIM4Forests journey (April 2023 - April 2024).
Main publications
Accelerating Innovative Monitoring for Forests
04/05/2023
AIM4Forests is a five-year programme that aims to support forest monitoring based on modern monitoring technologies and technical innovation, as well as the use of space data and remote sensing.
E-learnings
Our activities
AIM4Forests: One year of impact
22/04/2024
More from FAO
- FAO National Forest Monitoring Team
- Open Foris
- SEPAL
- CBIT-Forest
- REDD+ programme
- Global Forest Resources Assessments