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SCA Expands Key Habitat by Over 30,000 Hectares

Almost 31000 hectares of new key habitats reported

Over the past five years, SCA has added 30,763 hectares of new key habitat within the framework of the company’s forestry operations. In total, this means that roughly 78,000 hectares of the company’s land are assessed as key habitat.

Ola Kårén Head of Forest Management at SCA Skog

In the early 1990s, Sweden and SCA began identifying key habitats, and the concept has evolved over time. A key habitat is an area in the forest that, due to its high conservation values, is of great significance for forest plants and animals. The Swedish Forest Agency was responsible for identifying key habitats on private landowners’ properties, while forestry companies carried out their own inventories. Logging within key habitats may only be conducted to promote conservation values according to the FSC and PEFC certification standards. SCA’s forestry operations were certified in 1999, and like other forestry companies, SCA conducted extensive inventories and established methods to identify key habitats. Sweden’s expert authority, the Swedish Forest Agency, decided at the turn of 2021–2022 to cease its own registration of key habitats.

However, SCA has chosen to continue working with the concept and has registered nearly 31,000 hectares of new key habitat during the period 2021–2025. The stands have been identified as part of a broader program of conservation value inventories conducted by SCA during this period, as well as during harvest planning.

During this period, SCA has also downgraded a smaller area from the key habitat designation. This is due to the fact that the early reporting was sometimes imprecise. Older forest classifications were used, and entire stands were often registered. As a result, areas that are not key habitats were included in the reporting and later adjusted for greater accuracy.

In total, this involves roughly 1,200 hectares over the past five years that have been reclassified into another conservation value category.

According to the FSC standard for forestry in Sweden, it is the certified forest owner who is responsible for identifying key habitats and preserving biological diversity within them by excluding these areas from forestry or performing conservation-oriented management.

The latter means that areas containing key habitats may over time become subject to forestry measures.

For further information, please contact: SCA Press Office +46 60 19 33 01

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Ian Horne
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