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US Law Curbs Illegal Logging

   The  US  Congress  amends  century-old  law to target illegally logged
   imports

   Rosanne Skirble | Washington, DC 28 May 2010
   Shipment  of  suspected  illegal Rosewood logs in the port of Vohemar,
   Madagascar

Photo: Toby Smith

   Shipment  of  suspected  illegal Rosewood logs in the port of Vohemar,
   Madagascar

   The  United  States  is one of the world's largest consumers of timber
   and  wood  products.  While  much of that wood is produced in American
   forests,  about  $40 billion worth of timber is imported into the U.S.
   each year.
   How  that  wood  is  grown  and  whether it was harvested legally have
   become  crucial questions since 2008, when the U.S. Congress amended a
   century-old piece of environmental law known as the Lacey Act.
   Illicitly-traded timber 
   The  amended law bans the import of wood products from illegal logging
   operations,  and  threatens  U.S.  companies that violate the law with
   stiff  fines,  jail  time,  and confiscation of their illicitly-traded
   timber or forest products.
   Six  months  ago,  agents of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service raided
   the  Gibson  Guitar  company  plant in Nashville, Tennessee and seized
   shipments  of  illegally harvested rosewood from Madagascar. The famed
   instrument maker is being investigated for violating the federal law.
   Allan Thornton is president of the Environmental Investigation Agency,
   a Washington-based nonprofit that documents illegal logging activities
   worldwide.
   "As  we're following the timber flow through countries like Singapore,
   Malaysia,  Taiwan  and  China and back into the United States or Japan
   and  European  Union  countries,"  he says, "we became gradually aware
   that illegal logging is pervasive around the world."
   Extent of the problem
   The  extent  of illegal logging varies widely by exporting country and
   species.
   According  to  an  Environmental  Investigation Agency report, in some
   countries  it  is  as  high as 60 to 80 percent. Thornton says the new
   amendment  to  the Lacey Act is a wake-up call for anyone who wants to
   trade in the lucrative U.S. wood products market.
   He  estimates about 10 percent of wood imported into the United States
   is illegal.
   Everyone  wants to export to the United States and that creates a huge
   incentive  for  producers  and  exporters to be in compliance with the
   U.S. Lacey Act. It also creates a huge disincentive for those who want
   to export or trade in illegal wood products.
   Thornton  is  encouraged  by  the  response  to  the  law  from timber
   exporters  and  forest-dependent  communities  who look to their local
   forests for fuel, food and livelihood.
   "So  we  feel  that  it is a rising tide that lifts all boats in joint
   efforts to protect the global forests," says Thornton.
   Members  of  the  new  Forest  Legality  Alliance  expect to help curb
   illegal logging.

Giana Appleman

   Members  of  the  new  Forest  Legality  Alliance  expect to help curb
   illegal logging.

   Informed decisions
   The  Environmental  Investigation  Agency  is  a  partner in the newly
   formed  Forest  Legality  Alliance,  a global initiative that includes
   business, government and non-profit groups.
   The  focus,  says  Adam  Grant,  who manages the program for the World
   Resources  Institute, is to help industry answer some basic questions:
   "Where  did you buy your timber? What is the volume? What is the value
   and  is  it legal? Once you get this information then you are going to
   be able to differentiate between a risky proposition for purchase to a
   less risky [purchase]."
   Grant  says  the  alliance  will  develop an easy-to-use, on-line risk
   management program to help companies sort through a minefield of legal
   and environmental regulations.
   "If  you want to buy from a country, you can click on that country and
   you  can drill down to the district you want to buy from and different
   information will pop up of what the legal requirements of that country
   [are],  the risk from purchasing there, the species you're purchasing,
   what  are  the  ramifications  of buying that and then you can make an