The Montréal Process
- About Us
- Member Countries
- Working Group
- Technical Advisory Committee
- Montréal Process Contacts
- Colleagues
Addressing Global Forest Challenges
Resources
The Montréal Process
The Montréal Process Working Group was formed in 1994 as a bold, intergovernmental response to the pressing need for sustainable forest management. One of its first tasks was to develop and implement internationally agreed-upon criteria and indicators for the conservation and sustainable management of temperate and boreal forests.
Christina Hendricks Promotes Sustainable Forestry and the Montreal Process. See the videos…
Member Countries
The Montréal Process countries are Argentina, Australia, Canada, Chile, China, Japan, Korea, Mexico, New Zealand, Russian Federation, United States of America, and Uruguay. The Montréal Process member countries countries account for:
- 90% of the temperate and boreal forests,
- 58% of planted forests,
- 49% of the world’s forests,
- 49% of the world’s roundwood production, and
- 31% of the world’s population.
Through the Montréal Process, member countries continue to make a voluntary commitment to work alongside each other to further the sustainable management of their forests and to create a pathway for collaboration and capacity building.
Spotlight
New Zealand's Third Country Report on the Montreal Process Criteria and Indicators (PDF, 7.2 MB)
Second Argentine Report for the Montreal Process English (PDF, 16.2 MB) Spanish (PDF, 13.1 MB)
The Montreal Process Fact Sheet: English (PDF, 1.1 MB), French (PDF, 1.3 MB) Japanese (PDF, 1.3 MB) Spanish (2.2 MB)
The Montréal Process, Criteria and Indicators for the Conservation and Sustainable Management of Temperate and Boreal Forests, Fifth Edition, September 2015 English (PDF, 4.3 MB) Spanish (PDF, 1.0 MB)
Montréal Process Criteria and Indicators Poster (PDF, 157 KB)