Developing tourism and services in protective and special-use forests in parallel with conservation will become a key part of the national economy in the future, said Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Nguyen Xuan Cuong.
Developing tourism and services in protective and
special-use forests in parallel with conservation will become a key part of the
national economy in the future (Photo: VNA)
The forests will be an advantage for the country if they are
managed effectively, Cuong said at a national workshop on protective and
special-use forest management held in Ha Noi on December 19.
Cuong told participants that protective and special-use
forests play an important role as they have high biodiversity and are a place
for the conservation of rare and precious plants and animals, tourism and
service development and a valve regulating the climate for each sub-region.
Data from the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development
(MARD) showed that the country now has 2.15 million hectares of protective
forest and 4.6 million hectares of special-use forest.
It is estimated that 54 out of 63 provinces and cities have
protective forests and 59 out of 63 provinces and cities have special-use
forests. Dak Lak province ranks first in having the largest area of special-use
forest while Bac Lieu province has the smallest area of special-use
forest. Nghe An province has the largest area of protective forest and Bac Ninh
province has the smallest.
Cuong asked the Vietnam Administration of Forestry to pay
more attention to the two kinds of forest.
It should concentrate on both conservation of biodiversity
and economic development, rather than just focusing on conservation, he said.
There are 231 protective forest management boards and 164
special-use forest management boards throughout the country.
The administration was told to classify, assess and point
out typical models to improve management.
Nguyen Duy Thinh, Deputy Director of Hoang Lien National
Park in the northern mountainous province of Lao Cai, said the park’s management
board planned to submit a project to develop eco-tourism in the special-use
forest soon.
Thinh said the park currently managed two routes for tourists in the forest and
charged fees. After collecting the fees, the park was allowed to keep 20 percent
while 80 percent would be sent to the State budget.
He said the money the park kept was barely enough to pay salaries, with no
money left to develop tourism. In the meantime, the demand for tourism was
increasing.
Thinh suggested the ministry allow the park to keep 90
percent of the collected fees to invest in tourism development.
Nguyen Quoc Tri, General Director of the Vietnam
Administration of Forestry, said management boards of protective and
special-use forests were expected to gradually apply financial autonomy by
collecting payments for forest environmental services and fees from developing
eco-tourism.
By 2025, it was hoped that half of protective and
special-use forests would run eco-tourism services./.
Source: VNA