The Forest House - an interactive guide to the wood in your home
The Earth's ancient forests are unique, centuries old regions
that support countless plant and animal species as well as native
communities.
But they are rapidly vanishing as the demand for wood and paper
grows. In fact, only 20 percent of the world's ancient forests
remain - a very scary statistic.
Our comfy houses are contributing to the problem - in Europe, 50
percent of the tropical wood used in our furniture, doors and
window frames is logged illegally, often from irresponsibly managed
ancient forests. This wood often fuels corruption and social
conflict and destroys the homes of endangered or undiscovered
species.
But how do you know what wood you should and shouldn't buy? Can
the same type of wood be both "good" and "bad" depending on where
it comes from? And just how do you tell your Maple from your Merbau
and your Birch from Bangkiria?
Our interactive Forest House
is a room-by-room (and garden) guide to wood in household products,
featuring everything from flowerboxes to guitars. You can also
learn exactly why wood is "good" or "bad" and print out our
one-pager to stick on the fridge and check before you make that
trip to IKEA.
The Forest House also lets you search by product, so if you're
on the lookout for a new hatstand or toilet seat, you'll know you
should give teak a miss.
In general, the safest wood is always Forest Stewardship Council
(FSC) certified. This means that the wood is from a sustainably
managed forest and that the rights of indigenous peoples are
respected during the logging process. Some homeware stores such as
IKEA and Home Depot (in the US) have made commitments to only
source FSC certified wood for their products.
Read more
Check out
the Forest House.
The Forest
Stewardship Council.
Go Ancient Forest Friendly - our consumer guide to recycled
paper.
Become a forest
guardian.
Join Greenpeace.
The information in the Forest House interactive website is based on research of wood imports into the Netherlands. However, different countries source wood products from different forests around the world. The information in this website may therefore not necessarily apply to all other countries around the world, including your own.
To be absolutely sure that the wood and paper products in your home are not contributing to the destruction of the worlds ancient forests, always insist on recycled and Forest Stewardship Council(FSC)-certified products.