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The EU's timber sector is one of the least regulated in the EU and is the principal export market from Russia, the Amazon Basin and Africa.
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In today’s vote, the European Parliament supported the recommendations of its environment committee to strictly control timber products sold on the EU market. They are taking a page from your book and are looking to place a firm but loving grip on naughty wood sold on the EU market. Now we just need the European agriculture ministers to get in on the game and take this law forward by the end of this year. It’s time to make sure that illegal wood products stay out of the EU.
The Parliament took the Commission’s draft timber law and made it better by making companies guarantee the legality of wood products sold in their shops and by creating an EU-wide framework for punishments for nasty offenders. It is also recommending a move towards fully sustainable sourcing.
Right now, the EU is one of the world’s largest markets for timber. About 19 percent of EU wood imports come from illegal logging. That means without even knowing it, your new bed frame could be contributing to deforestation, forest destruction, climate change and biodiversity loss, poverty and social tensions in developing countries. Not really what you had in mind when you were thinking about the unmentionables that come along with a new addition in the bedroom is it?
As it stands, the current proposal needs to be a little firmer to really fight illegal logging and give you peace of mind about that new bed frame.
You know what you want when it comes to good wood. A survey carried out by “You Gov Plc” for WWF and Friends of the Earth in 14 European countries showed:
In 2006, Almost 90 companies, including Habitat (UK), Castorama (France), IKEA and Skanska International (Sweden), UNITAL (Association of Italian furniture manufacturers) all signed a joint declaration calling on European authorities to adopt legislation laying down clear rules for Europe which allow fair competition and responsible markets.