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An aerial view of forest destruction near Borneo's Tanjung Puting National Park. Indonesia has already lost about 65 percent of its ancient forests. Here, illegal logging and corruption within the logging industry remains widespread. It is estimated that up to 90 percent of raw timber supplying the country's wood processing industry is logged illegally.
Enlarge Image'Sharing
the Blame: Global Consumption and China's Role in Ancient Forest Destruction'
(1), documents illegally logged timber, particularly from the Paradise Forests
of Asia Pacific (2), being shipped to China. There, it is made into furniture,
flooring and plywood for domestic consumption and for export to satisfy the
rising, global demand for inexpensive wood products.
China
is now the world's largest importer of tropical woods: half of all tropical
trees logged globally end up in China. Much of this wood comes from Indonesia
and Papua New Guinea where between 76 to 90 per cent of the logging is illegal.
"Illegal
logging is rampant in many of the countries that supply China with wood and
this destructive trade is fueling the global forest crisis," said Sze Pang
Cheung, deputy campaign director for Greenpeace China. "China has
committed internationally to tackle this problem and must, together with all
countries that import these wood products, take urgent concrete action to ban
the trade in timber from illegal or destructive logging."
The
report applauds some international buyers for starting to address the issue of
illegal logging. Recently, numerous
companies in Europe have committed to stop purchasing Chinese plywood made from
illegally logged timber from Papua New Guinea. These include Wolseley (UK),
PontMeyer (Netherlands), Castorama (France) and the French Federation of Timber
Importers (Le Commerce du Bois).
However,
the report concludes that the world's forests cannot sustain current
consumption patterns in developed countries and China's escalating demand.
China's hunger for wood is already driving more trees to be felled.
In the
last 10 years alone, China's total consumption of wood products increased by
70%. A third of this was due to increase in exports of wood products and 66% to
increases in domestic consumption. Greenpeace warns that if China were to
increase its per capita paper consumption to that of the USA, for example, this
would require nearly 1.6 billion additional cubic metres of wood to be logged -
equivalent to the Earth's entire yearly harvest.
Today,
it is North America, Europe, Japan and other developed countries that consume
more ancient forests than anyone else.
"There's
massive over-consumption of wood products in developed regions such as North
America and Europe," said Tamara Stark, international advisor to
Greenpeace China. "If the world's ancient forests are to survive,
consumption levels in these countries has to drop dramatically."
This
month, China acknowledged that the environmental impact of consumption is a
serious issue, with Premier, Wen Jiabao's, call to the country to reduce
consumption of wood. Just last week, the Chinese Government announced a 5%
consumption tax on hardwood flooring and disposable chopsticks.
"It's
positive that China is taking steps to address wasteful consumption of wood
products, but the scale pf the problem warrants nothing less than a new vision
of development," said Sze Pang Cheung.
Greenpeace
is urging China and the other 187 signatory nations to the United Nations
Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), meeting in Curitiba, Brazil this
week, to protect the world's last ancient forests up by establishing a global
network of protected forest areas, to ban the trade in illegally and
destructively logged wood products and to introduce a legally binding mechanism
under the CBD to combat illegal and destructive logging.
Greenpeace
is an independent, campaigning organisation which uses non-violent, creative
confrontation to expose global environmental problems, and to force solutions
essential to a green and peaceful future. It is committed to protecting the
world's last ancient forests and the people and animals that depend upon them.
(1) read the new report on: http://www.greenpeace.org/international/press/reports/sharing-the-blame
(2) The Paradise Forests stretch from South East Asia, across the islands of Indonesia and on towards Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands in the Pacific.
Images of the Paradise Forest and video footage of the trade in illegally and destructively logged timber are available on request.