You may have found a metal plate in your forest or on your land mentioning the National Forest Inventory (« Inventaire Forestier National », IFN) or the National Institute of Geographic and Forest Information (« Institut national de l’information géographique et forestière », IGN), or a plain white metal plate. This page is specifically for you. |
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Why did the French National forest inventory visit your property? The "national forest inventory" is a mandatory statistical survey (like the population census conducted by the National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies (INSEE)). This means that a response is required for your property (note that the information collected is strictly focused on the forest, not on the owner), and access to the land must be granted.
After the measurements and observations have been completed, all that remains is a white metal plate at eye level, the staples indicating precisely where the circumference was measured at 1.3 metres, a wooden marker stake on the ground, and the staples that secured the field forms listing information on measured trees. To learn more about what IGN agents do on your property and what happens to the data collected, see the brochure opposite. |