Vietnam has become a clearing house for illegal timber plundered from forests across south-east Asia and some of it ends up in garden furniture sold in the UK and other EU countries, says a recent report.
The Vietnam government has increased the protection of its own forests in the last few years, but its timber producers have become brokers for illegal logging operations, sourcing hardwoods mainly from the rainforests of Laos, according to the report from campaigning organisation the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA).
The EIA report draws on evidence gained by undercover investigators, working for Indonesian lobby group Telapak, who posed as retail furniture buyers.
"Field investigations in Vietnam and neighbouring Laos, including secret filming and undercover visits to furniture factories, have demonstrated that ... criminal networks have now shifted their attention to looting the vanishing forests of Laos," says the report.
The EIA estimates that at least 500,000 cubic metres of logs are moved across the border from Laos into Vietnam every year. In the 1990s, Vietnamese timber companies were caught laundering illegal logs from Cambodia and Indonesia.
The trade is in direct contravention of Laos law. The EIA and Telapak are calling for immediate international action and urging retail procurement staff to check carefully the source of the timber used to make any products they buy from Vietnamese manufacturers.
Vietnam’s wooden furniture producers clocked up $2.4bn of business last year - a 10-fold increase since 2000. The EIA report concludes that this dynamic growth of Vietnam’s furniture industry is driven by the demand of end markets including Europe and the US.
"The ultimate responsibility for this dire state of affairs rests with the consumer markets that import wood products made from stolen timber," said Julian Newman, head of the EIA’s forests campaign. "Until these states clean up their act and shut their markets to illegal wood products, the loss of precious tropical forests will continue unabated."
Wal-Mart to tempt partners to go green with financial carrot, as Staples wields stick against Indonesian paper supplier 12 Feb 2008
Greenpeace claims Nestle, Unilever and Procter & Gamble are all contributing to the destruction of precious Indonesian peat swamp forests through palm oil deployment 08 Nov 2007
Wood-fired power stations might not be as fashionable as wind or solar energy, but according to Bernard Fairman of investment firm Foresight Group they have a key role to play in meeting renewables targets and could revitalise the UK's forestry sector 05 Feb 2008
Ethical investors will continue to back carbon-intensive firms, but only if they see a commitment to limit environmental impacts 20 Nov 2007
Greenpeace claims Nestle, Unilever and Procter & Gamble are all contributing to the destruction of precious Indonesian peat swamp forests through palm oil deployment 08 Nov 2007
But environmentalists claim proposals will be difficult to enforce and will not stop deforestation of tropical rainforests 23 Nov 2007
Ethical investors will continue to back carbon-intensive firms, but only if they see a commitment to limit environmental impacts 20 Nov 2007
Focus on energy savings through fuel efficiency for homes and public and commercial buildings 04 Jul 2008
ActionAid accuses G8 of driving more people into poverty by pursing biofuels and cutting agri-aid 04 Jul 2008
Businesses' new found focus on the environment may be welcome, but according to Conrad MacKerron, it is taking attention away from workers' rights issues – and the credibility of the entire green business movement could be at risk 03 Jul 2008
It may be a year old, but as Dell's Jonathan Perry explains, firms looking to get rid of their old IT kit still need to pay attention to the WEEE directive 02 Jul 2008
Telling customers about your environmental targets is all well and good but, as Paul Thomas argues, they are meaningless if you do not know how they are to be achieved 01 Jul 2008




