Greenpeace Activists Board Ship Carrying Illegal Mahogany

Media release - April 12, 2002
Greenpeace activists boarded a shipment of illegal Brazilian mahogany at a Miami port, calling on President Bush to return all mahogany shipments from Brazil and to investigate companies that continue to buy it.

Greenpeace activists boarded a shipment of illegal Brazilian mahogany today at a Miami port, calling on President Bush to return all mahogany shipments from Brazil and to investigate companies that continue to buy it. The mahogany was part of a shipment that came from Brazil on the APL Jade. The protestors arrived on inflatable boats and hung a banner reading "President Bush, Stop Illegal Logging" once aboard the ship.

"President Bush said recently that stopping illegal logging is a priority," said Scott Paul, Greenpeace forest campaigner, "but the U.S. continues to be the biggest importer of illegal wood. The United States needs to develop laws and enforce them to insure that U.S. consumers are not unknowingly fueling this crime."

On February 14th, President Bush gave a speech at NOAA where he stated his commitment to combating illegal logging in developing countries. He said he will be directing Secretary of State Collin Powell to put together an initiative to combat illegal logging. Last month, Greenpeace representatives met with a government task force on this issue, including White House official James Connaughton, Chair of the Council of Environmental Quality.

Earlier this week Greenpeace discovered seized mahogany in Miami earmarked for Aljoma, a timber company based in Florida. In addition, Greenpeace uncovered evidence that the United States continues to receive illegal mahogany in several ports including Baltimore, Charleston, Gulf Port, MS., Houston, Miami and Norfolk, VA. As reported in The Wall Street Journal on March 29, 2002, Greenpeace's on-going investigation revealed that at least ten million dollars worth of shipments have arrived into U.S. ports following Brazil's moratorium on mahogany exports in October. The U.S. Government has been holding Brazilian mahogany in U.S. ports for more than a month and has not indicated what they will do with the cargo. The campaign to ban illegal mahogany intensified in October 2001, following a Greenpeace report, titled "Partners in Mahogany Crime," that exposed rampant illegal trade in mahogany. Based on Greenpeace's investigation, the Brazilian government halted all mahogany trade. Despite a tougher ban imposed in December, some companies have managed to continue exporting to the United States and other countries.

The European Union and CITES, an international convention that deals with endangered species, also called for a ban on Amazon mahogany until the Brazilian government can verify the legal status of the wood. During a speech on April 9, 2002, President Cardoso of Brazil confirmed the illegal trade in mahogany and supported a global ban.

Read the report, Partners in Mahogany Crime.