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Inner Mongolia Forest Management Practices

Original Language Title: 内蒙古自治区公益林管理办法

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(Summit 8th ordinary meeting of the Government of the People of the Autonomous Region of Mongolia, held on 27 September 2007 to consider the adoption of Decree No. 152 of 23 October 2007 of the People's Government of the Autonomous Region of Mongolia, effective 1 December 2007)

Article 1, in order to strengthen the protection and construction of public goods, improve the ecological environment, protect the legitimate rights and interests of all people and operators of public goods, develop this approach in line with the People's Forests Act and the relevant laws, regulations and regulations.
Article 2 engages in activities such as the protection, construction and management of public goods in the administrative areas of the self-government area.
Article 3. This approach refers to the functionality of eco-efficiency and social benefits to provide public goods, social products or services as the main direction and to forest, forest and forest areas, including protection forests and special-purpose forests, as defined by the State.
The protection forests referred to in this approach refer to forests, forest woods and inflights for the main purpose of protection, including water-nutrients, soil conservation forests, wind-rich forests, agricultural fields, pastoral protection forests, and road safety.
This approach refers to forests and forest woods, such as defence, environmental protection, scientific experiments, for the main purposes, including defence forests, experimental forests, home tree forests, environmental protection forests, wind forests, artefacts and forested forests for natural protected areas.
Article IV Protection and construction of public goods should be guided by the principles of government ownership, unity planning, social participation, sub-implementation, strict protection and responsibilities.
Article 5 More than the people at the flag level are specifically responsible for the day-to-day management of public goods.
Article 6. Governments at all levels should be given recognition and incentives to units and individuals that have made a difference in the protection, construction and management of public goods.
Article 7
Public good forest planning should be coordinated with overall land-use planning, forestry long-term planning, environmental protection planning, water conservation planning, urban overall planning and other related planning.
Article 8. Governments at all levels have established responsibilities for the construction of public good works in this jurisdiction, through the signing of a bill of responsibility for escorts and the implementation of the responsibilities.
Article 9
The form of a public good forest protection contract is developed by the forest administration authorities of the self-government, in accordance with the relevant national provisions.
Article 10 is the State's forest plant, the natural protected area and its national forest operation unit; the responsibility unit for collective public good forest escorts is the administrative village, galvanization; the personal owner or operator of the public good, whose responsibilities are assumed by the owner or operator of the public good.
The public interest forest responsibility unit should delineate the area of responsibility for escorting, with dedicated foresters and perform the responsibility for the protection of forests.
Article 11
Article 12 Governments at all levels should encourage and support the participation of the social forces in the construction of public goods, and the citizen's annual plan for afforestation should prioritize the development of public goods.
The construction of public goods should take advantage of the original features, landscapes, water systems, vegetation and be consistent with national technical standards.
Article 14 No unit or individual shall destroy or unauthorized mobile public works.
Article 15.
(i) Deforest fire, hunting and pastoraling;
(ii) Exhumation, extraction and logging;
(iii) Inland fire;
(iv) Emissions and solid waste.
Article 16 prohibits the acquisition of the following public goods:
(i) Forests and forest woods for wins and monuments;
(ii) Forests and forest woods for natural protected areas with endangered species or ecosystems;
(iii) Forests and forest woods in other disadvantaged areas of the ecological environment.
In addition to article 17, public interest forests other than article 16 can be updated for harvesting, forgiveing or for low-efficiencies, but the following public goods shall not be updated:
(i) Over 25 degrees of public interest forests;
(ii) The ancestral public good forests that are naturally generated by the twenty-fifth slope;
(iii) A public good forest that has not reached the age of mature for protection, which has been developed by the following twenty-five degrees.
A public good forest is to update harvesting, buy-in and low-efficiency forest-removable logging, and a licence for harvesting should be obtained by law.
More than 18 per cent of the population at the flag district level should set up forest fire protection propaganda cards in public interest forests regions and beyond, opening cross-regional fire-free zones, form a professional firefighting force and prevent and rescue forest fires.
Article 19
Article 20 The operation of ecotourists and operators within the scope of their operation shall be subject to approval procedures in accordance with the relevant laws, regulations.
Article 21
Article 2, Protection, construction and management of public goods, in accordance with the principles of financial management, integrity and ownership, is included in the Government's financial budget for people at all levels of the flag and above, and in accordance with economic development.
Article 23 Governments of more people at the flag district level should establish the Forest Eco-efficiency Compensation Fund for costs and benefits such as construction, care, protection and management incurred by public service responsibilities units and individuals in escorts. The specific management approach of the Forest Ecoefficient Compensation Fund is developed by the National Forestry Administration of the Autonomous Region, in conjunction with the Financial Administration of the Autonomous Region, following approval by the Government.
Reparations for State-focused public works are implemented in accordance with the relevant national provisions.
Article 24
The approved IPF implementation programme shall not be altered; changes are required and shall be approved by the original approval department.
Article 25 Any unit or individual shall not be diverted, crowded and excluded from the Forest Eco-benefit Compensation Fund.
Article 26 provides for the protection of public goods and the construction of a public good forest management authority of the Government of the Festival Region, which has been reviewed by the National Agency for Administration of Forestry, the National Authority for the Establishment of the Territory's Government's Forestry Administration, and the third inspection system verified by the forest administration authorities of the self-government.
The protection of public goods and the construction of inspection tests should include: implementation of public good forest protection laws, regulations, regulations, regulations and regulations, protection of the implementation of the indicators, use of the public good forest compensation fund, archives, database construction, etc.
Article 27 of the Charter of the Government of Forestry Administration and the Guardianship units should establish public interest forest management files. The content of the management of the archives should include situations such as dedicated escorts, escort systems and responsibilities, funds use, operating activities and resource changes.
As a result of natural and man-made impacts, changes in resources such as public goods, areas, sizes, accumulations, should be carried out in field surveys, and archival updates are carried out in a timely manner after the revision of the data.
Article 28, in violation of the provisions of this approach, provides for administrative penalties, which are provided for by law, legislation and regulations.
Article 29, in violation of this approach, engages in activities in public interest forests where the forest administration authorities of the local people of the flag district are responsible for the cessation of the violation, the duration of the restitution of the status quo, the late failure to reproduce the status quo, and the costs incurred by the local authorities of the Government of the People's Forests within the flag and above are borne by the offender:
(i) Emissions and storage of solid wastes;
(ii) The destruction or unauthorized launch of mobile public works.
Article 33
(i) In violation of this approach, approval of projects that cause damage to the ecological function of forests;
(ii) Removal, crowding and intercepting the Eco-benefit Compensation Fund;
(iii) In violation of the provisions of this approach, refusal to enter into a public good forest protection contract with the public good responsibilities units and individuals responsible for the responsibility to protect;
(iv) Other abuse of power, sterilization, provocative fraud caused damage to public goods.
Article 31 of this approach was implemented effective 1 December 2007.