Home
/
Isiam
/
Politics & Economics
/
China timber trade 'fuels climate change'
China timber trade 'fuels climate change'
Apr 30, 2025 10:47 PM

  China's skyrocketing demand for timber to fuel its economic boom is driving illegal logging and contributing to the destruction of forests in Asia and Africa, needed now more than ever to halt climate change, a new environmental report says.

  China is now the biggest international consumer of illegal timber, according to the report from the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA), which adds that the trade is causing the destruction of vast tracts of forest in developing countries.

  Globally, the trade in illegal timber is worth between $30 billion and $100 billion a year, according to an Interpol and United Nations Environment Program report.

  Deforestation is a major contributor to climate change, as the trees that soak up carbon dioxide disappear.

  "Illegal logging now accounts for between 15 and 30 per cent of the global legal trade and significantly hampers the Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD) initiative," the Interpol-UNEP report said.

  The EIA report - titled "Appetite for Destruction" - highlights what it says is China's lack of action to prevent imports of illegal timber.

  "A major barrier to the effectiveness of China's anti-illegal logging response is the country's stated unwillingness to explicitly prohibit illegal timber trade," it said.

  China imported about 180 million cubic meters of wood products worth $9.3 billion in 2011, becoming the largest importer and exporter of timber products.

  Saving its own forests

  In contrast with its growing import of timber, China has taken action to protect its own forests and imposed strict logging controls. Because of these actions, the country's forests are unable to meet the demands of the wood-processing sector.

  "China launched its national natural forest protection program and that had a lot of impact in protecting natural forest in China. It means that the Chinese industry can't get timber from domestic forests so has to increase its imports," said Liu Bing, the head of Greenpeace East Asia's forest campaign.

  Successful reforestation efforts have been carried out, and according to the state news agency Xinhua, the Chinese government has committed to increase forest coverage by 40 million hectares and forest stock volume by 1.3 billion cubic meters by 2020 from 2005 levels.

  While China has taken successful steps to protect its own forests, it is at the same time relying on the destruction of others for raw materials. "China is now effectively exporting deforestation around the world," Faith Doherty, head of the EIA forests campaign, told Al Jazeera.

  Much of the timber comes from countries with forest governance deemed less than stringent, such as Papua New Guinea and Mozambique, and countries where such exports are banned, including Indonesia. Most rosewood logs imported into China in 2011 reportedly came from Southeast Asia's Mekong region, despite a series of logging and trade bans on endangered tree species.

  According to Forest Trends, a Washington-based NGO that promotes sustainable forest management and conservation, China's consumption of wood products was 371 million cubic meters a year in 2007. At current growth rates, it will rise to 477 million cubic meters by 2020.

  While much of the timber is used for the booming construction sector, there is also rising demand for furniture made from exotic and rare woods among affluent Chinese. Replicating ornate designs from the Qing and Ming dynasties, some of these pieces are sold for as much as $1 million each.

  Taking Myanmar's forests

  One of the countries most affected by the illegal timber trade into China is neighboring Myanmar.

  According to the EIA report, Myanmar has one of the worst rates of deforestation in the world and, since the late 1990s. China has imported large volumes of its timber, most of which was reportedly logged and traded illegally.

  Despite an agreement in 2006 between the Chinese and Myanmar governments to stop the illegal timber trade, it appears to have continued.

  "Chinese traders confirmed that as long as taxes are paid at the point of import, logs are allowed in despite a commitment from the Yunnan provincial government to allow in only timber accompanied by documents from the Myanmar authorities attesting to its legal origin," an EIA investigation found last year.

  Doherty said the Chinese government must follow actions taken by the European Union, the United States and Australia to crack down on the trade.

  Doherty highlighted the EU Timber Regulation legislation set to come into force in March 2013. "It will be a criminal offence to illegally source wood products and timber, that includes products from China," she said.

  Responding to questions about the EIA report, the Chinese government said it would toughen up enforcement.

  "We resolutely oppose and crack down on illegal logging and related trade and stick to the mutually beneficial and sustainable strategy of forestry management and cooperation," said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei.

  Liu Bing, head of Greenpeace East Asia's forest campaign, said Beijing needs to quickly introduce legislation to tackle the illegal trade driving global deforestation. But he said he believed the Chinese government would indeed take action.

  "I think they are really serious because they are under pressure from the international community," Lui told Al Jazeera. "It is the only way … to make the reputation of the [timber] industry and of China better."

  PHOTO CAPTION

  A man walks near a timber storage area in Shanghai December 12, 2011.

  Source: Aljazeera.com

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Politics & Economics
Europe no sanctuary for Afghan asylum seekers
  As Afghanistan's army was beginning to assume a more active combat role in 2007 - and as suicide bombings and opium production hit record highs - Omar thought a move to Europe would make his life safer.   Instead, as with the 300 Afghans who marched in Stockholm that year to...
Displaced Afghans left out in cold
  Every day 400 Afghans become internally displaced, according to Amnesty International. At that rate, more than 2,500 Afghans were left homeless in the week of violent protests that swept the country recently over the burning of copies of the Noble Quran at the US-led Bagram airbase.   They joined the ranks...
NATO ‘pullout’ won’t actually remove troops from Afghanistan
  Following in the rich history of fake endings to wars during the Obama Administration’s first term, the US and other NATO member nations are loudly hyping their endorsement of a transition pact, which is being presented as an “irreversible pullout” of occupation forces.   “We are now unified to responsibly wind...
Slamming the door to justice on Palestinians
  Israel's ability to commit crimes against Palestinians with impunity relies on international complicity.   There is a determined international effort to ensure that Palestinians are shut out of every legal forum where they could pursue justice for Israel's crimes against them. Nothing illustrates this better than the horrifying case of the...
'Jewish democracy' founded on ugly battles
  Israel has a Jewish majority today because of the expulsions and denationalization of most Palestinians living there.   Among the many good reasons for marking the anniversary of the Nakba are two which speak to the intensifying debate about Israel's "democratic values": firstly, the fact that the Nakba is ongoing, in...
Palestinian hunger strikes: Media missing in action
  Can anyone doubt that if there were more than 1,500 prisoners engaged in a hunger strike in any country in the world other than Palestine, the media in the West would be obsessed with the story? Such an obsession would, of course, be greatest if such a phenomenon were to...
Drone Warfare and Accountability
  Fazillah, age 25, lives in Maidan Shar, the central city of Afghanistan’s Wardak province. She married about six years ago, and gave birth to a son, Aymal, who just turned five without a father. Fazillah tells her son, Aymal, that his father was killed by an American bomber plane, remote-controlled...
White House: Drone Strikes ‘Legal and Ethical’
  Obama Aide: Constitution Makes Strikes Lawful Anywhere on Planet   Fresh off of an interview yesterday in which he shrugged off civilian killings in the US drone war, top White House adviser John O. Brennan was ordered to provide more “openness” on the program at a speech today in Washington.   This...
Syria’s forgotten refugees
  It was 21 February 2006. The date is etched in Samia’s mind.   She was in her kitchen making tea for her brother’s family, who was visiting her at her home in the Iraqi capital Baghdad, when gunfire broke out in the sitting room.   “It was as if there was a...
A Game of Drones
  America’s recent foreign policy has been enabled by a central idea: the United States does things differently. It wages wars differently. It suspends habeas corpus sparingly and with great restraint. It encroaches on liberties more gingerly. And it puts military men and women at risk with a respectful selectivity. To...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved