Forests
The Forest Factor
Over the last 50 years, population and development pressures have decreased forest cover in Lao PDR from 70 percent to just over 40 percent, and that figure is shrinking by 0.6 percent a year.
If no action is taken to change this trend, Lao’s forests will dwindle to 31 percent by 2020 robbing the world of some of its most prized natural heritage, hindering national development and disadvantaging some of country’s most vulnerable communities.
Learn how our Global Forest & Trade Network-Laos is providing timber producers and processors with a framework to achieve Forestry Stewardship Council certification and make trade links with a global network of responsible buyers.
Non-timber Forest Products
Learn how A Switch to Sustainable Rattan Harvest and Production project, co-funded by the Uropean Union, IKEA, and DEG, is helping link communities in Lao PDR and Cambodia and Vietnam to multi-billion international rattan industry.
Marvellous Mak Jong
Every April, villagers from Ban Lao Nya, Pathoumphone District, Champasak Province, harvest Mak Jong or Malva Nut from the Dong Hua Sao Protected Area.
Harvesting this nut is no easy feat. Mak Jong grow to over 40 metres tall. To reach the nuts long nails are hammered into the tree’s trunk creating a ladder for harvesters to climb up. Once near the fruit at top harvesters bash the branches with a stick to dislodge the nuts.
This potentially dangerous climb is undertaken for Mak Jong’s medicinal properties and market value. Popular at local markets and as an export to China, Thailand, Vietnam, South Korea and France, when soaked in water Mak Jong produces a gelatine that is used to sooth sore throats, coughs and inflammation.
What Are National Protected Areas?
National Protected Areas provide home to some of the world’s rarest and most unique creatures, and offer valuable ecosystem functions that provide stability for land and water resources and infrastructure.
WWF's project work aims to strengthen management of National Protected Areas by increasing the participation of local communities and government in sustainable natural resource management.
Ecotourism and Xe Pian National Protected Area
Xe Pian National Protected area spans 240,000 hectares across southern Champasak and Attapeu provinces, and is emblematic of what is attracting travellers from around the world to Lao PDR at a growing rate.
Along with popular destinations like Luang Prabang, Lao PDR’s World Heritage Listed former capital city, Xe Pian has a rich cultural and historical heritage and is one of the most important areas for biodiversity in the country. Today, there are at least 25 regionally and globally threatened mammals living within Xe Pian’s resource-rich forests.
Learn about Xe Pian National Protected Area and how our Natural Ecotourism in Xe Pian National Protected Area project is supporting local communities and business access the region’s growing tourism market.
