The publication of The UK Forest Standard in 1998 (second edition in 2004), and the advent of independent certification through the UK Woodland Assurance Standard in 2000 (second edition in 2006) substantially altered the context for the Guidelines in their current format. It was decided that a fundamental review of the purpose and scope of the whole series was needed. This included a consultation exercise in 2004 which confirmed that a wide range of different stakeholders valued the Guidelines. It was therefore agreed to retain the series but to revise and re-publish the documents at a UK level – with the support of the Forestry Commission (in England, Scotland and Wales) and the Forest Service in Northern Ireland.
The revisions aim to clarify and strengthen the relationship between the Guidelines series and The UK Forestry Standard and to improve the consistency of approach. The new UK Forestry Standard will continue to define governments' requirements for sustainable forest management and will link directly to the Guidelines for greater detail on the key areas below:
- Forests and Landscape
- Forests and Historic Environment
- Forests and Biodiversity
- Forests and Soil
- Forests and Climate Change
- Forests and People
- Forests and Water
The UK Forestry Standard and Guidelines revision is an inclusive exercise. Interested parties have made contributions and comments during the consultation exercise which closed on 30 October 2009; these are now being considered by the management group. For more information contact Richard Howe.