NFP Facility logo

NFP Facility Partnership

Bhutan Bhutan

The Partnership Agreement between the NFP Facility and Bhutan was signed in mid-2009. The main objective of the partnership is to strengthen rural livelihoods through development of priority non-wood forest products (NWFPs) along the entire value chain, from collection in the wild to final sale. Four priority areas will be focused on in the NWFP strategy development, including: (i) community-led sustainable management initiatives; (ii) value addition, marketing, and information sharing; (iii) research and development, and technology transfer; and (iv) institutional and stakeholder capacity building. The objectives, outputs and proposed activities are intended to strengthen NWFP information, management, marketing and added value processing.

Bhutan is currently updating its 1974 National Forest Policy, which makes it mandatory that the country maintain 60% of its land under forest cover. The government has supported the nfp by committing over 19 million US$ for the period of 2008-2013 towards its implementation. Bhutan has already taken initiatives to form local community forest management groups that will take charge of managing the local forests. The country has a well formulated forest policy and legal framework, and its 10th five-year plan aims to achieve nfp targets, including focusing heavily on poverty alleviation by encouraging the participation of farmers and communities, and by strengthening the contribution of NWFPs.

Points of Contact

18 Jun 2009

Assessment of the nfp

In order to assess the progress and status of the nfp process, the Facility and FAO have designed a matrix to provide a clearer picture of how the country nfp processing are evolving, which elements are well developed and which elements remain weak and in need of further attention. The matrix has been tested in the countries to ensure the relevance of its indicators.

The matrix contains indicators for each phase of the nfp process: analysis, policy formulation, implementation and monitoring and evaluation. The indicators are clustered according to the primary nfp principles: country ownership, inter- and intra-sectoral linkages, partnerships and participation.

The matrix below was completed by stakeholders, in a participatory way, during a national workshop.

Each indicator was rated as follows:

the indicator has not been developed
the indicator is absent from the country nfp process
the indicator exists but is incipient
the indicator is progressing well within the country nfp process
the indicator is completed to the country’s full satisfaction - can serve as a model for others to follow

Implemented Activities