Problems in Forestry Field The concept of forestry we know today is only 400 years old. The development of forestry is mainly due to the need for continuous supply of timber products. There are several hunting and protected forest reserves in Europe, but the idea of managing forests for some resources is completely new. Almost every society has undergone four stages to develop this concept of forestry. The first phase relates to unregulated abuse of forest products used as energy, building materials, and roads to agricultural land.
Over the years, issues related to global warming and ozone depletion, energy use and production, toxic waste, water quality, extinction, tropical forest reduction, fishery management, forestry management and waste management have been studied in this field. History is of course the focus of many 19th century and 20th century philosophy, but modern environmental ethics was regarded as an academic field in the 1970s. Rachel Carson 's 1963 "Spring of Silence" is one of practical things to drive people into crisis (Stanford University Philosophy Encyclopedia, 2008).
In the 1970s, the theory of sharing forest function was a challenge to the theory of sustainable forest management. Two US forestry experts conducted close investigation and proposed a multi-benefit guide for forest management and utilization. They believe that future forest management in the world will shift to planting special forests to achieve different functions, rather than integrating the three main benefits, the increase in afforestation will affect the structure of the world's forest products market I believe it will change. From the latter half of the 20th century to the beginning of the 21st century, the pattern that "forest resources move to the south and timber moves north" will emerge.
Canada's forests and forestry are managed by the Canadian Ministry of Natural Resources, which manages natural resource issues, and the Canadian Forest Service, which is responsible for investigating and coordinating forest policy at national level. These organizations are backed by the National Forest Research Advisory Committee established in 1997 to focus on strategic issues and the Forest Sector Advisory Committee has a number of private, non-profit and non-profit organizations in Canada's forestry I will represent the interests of academic stakeholders. The Canadian Forest Minister Council is made up of 14 ministers representing the federal government, state and territory, and it is the primary means for spreading national and international policies nationwide.