Royal Forest Department

The Royal Forest Department (Thai: กรมป่าไม้) is a department in the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (MoNRE), part of the Government of Thailand.

In 1896 the Ministry of the Interior established the Royal Forest Department to conserve forests and control revenue from the teak forests in northern Thailand. A British forester, Herbert Slade, former Deputy Conservator of Forests in Burma, served as the first director of the department.[1] In its early days the department focused on obtaining tax revenue for the use of forests rather than conservation, although its conservators expressed concern about unsustainable harvesting of teak in Thailand's northern forests.[2] In 1899 all forests were declared government property and all logging without payment to the Royal Forest Department was prohibited.

Formerly the agency controlled Thailand's national parks but in 2002 this was taken over by the National Park, Wildlife and Plant Conservation Department (DNP), also part of the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment.

Today, the agency aims to monitor forests, coordinate research, encourage community forest management, conserve forest land and monitor the wood industry.[3] It is located at Chatuchak, Bangkok.

See also

References

  1. Pye, Oliver (2016-07-07). "Forest Policy and Strategic Groups in Thailand". Internationales Asienforum. 36 (3-4): 311–336. doi:10.11588/iaf.2005.36.429.
  2. "The Use and Abuse of Forest Work in Siam". Indian Forester. XXX (7): 299–303. 1904. Archived from the original on 2016-10-09.
  3. "Royal Forest Department". Bangkok Post. Retrieved 2016-10-08.

External links

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