The American Forest Foundation (AFF) has received a total of $1.5 million in funding over three years from the Dutch Biomass Certification Foundation (DBC) to proceed with a comprehensive sustainability assurance program.

Biofuel

The American Forest Foundation receives funding from Dutch Biomass Certification Foundation

The American Forest Foundation (AFF) has received a total of $1.5 million in funding over three years from the Dutch Biomass Certification Foundation (DBC) to proceed with a comprehensive sustainability assurance program.

The project will include two concurrent and complementary workstreams and delivers on DBC's objective to promote and accomplish certification among small forest owners in North America.

First, the Dutch funding will contribute to further building tools and technologies to engage small forest landowners in sustainable forest management and growing certification, including expansion of the American Tree Farm System (ATFS) certification among small forest owners (defined as less than 500 hectares or 1,200 acres) in the U.S. South. ATFS is approved as compliant with elements of the Dutch biomass sustainability requirements, or ‘SDE+’ that apply to family forests. This work will help expand the certified land base for the long-term delivery of fiber into the Netherlands and beyond. AFF’s engagement of family landowners in key sourcing areas prepares them for active management and potential certification to other applicable SDE+ approved schemes, including Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), thereby supporting certification expansion to all systems.

Second, AFF will use DBC’s investment to spearhead a longer-term project to develop a risk-based approach (RBA) to sustainability risk assessment, verification, and mitigation, following the Dutch ‘Verification Protocol.’ According to the protocol, a biomass producer can demonstrate compliance with applicable SDE+ sustainability requirements using an RBA for small forest lands by following the procedures through the end of 2022.

AFF has designed these two pathways to support and leverage each other. For example, the engagement of family landowners through the use of innovative, pivotal tools, including landscape management plans (LMPs), AFF’s WoodsCamp landowner engagement systems, and critical partnerships with ATFS State Committees and other local partners to grow ATFS certification may also support mitigation for areas of specified risk identified in an RBA.
The American Forest Foundation (AFF), a forest conservation organization, works on the ground with families, partners, and elected officials to promote stewardship and keep our forests healthy.