18th of sept. 2007
World Rainforest Movement, Timberwatch Coalition, Global Justice Ecology
Project, The Rainforest Foundation, FERN and ROBIN WOOD
FSC at a crossroad: Veracel timber certification would be yet another disaster for FSC
The wood-pulp producing company Veracel has applied for FSC
certification of its tree plantations in the Brazilian state of Bahia and
the evaluation process is being carried out by the international
certification firm SGS (Société Générale de Surveillance). Veracel, a
joint venture between Swedish-Finnish Stora Enso and Norwegian-Brazilian
Aracruz Cellulose exports almost all the pulp produced in Brazil to
overseas markets, where it is converted into paper.
A large number of Brazilian and international organizations are opposing
this certification, on the grounds that these plantations have resulted in
widespread negative social and environmental impacts -including occupation
of indigenous and local communities' lands, rural migration, unemployment,
water depletion and pollution, ecosystem destruction, biodiversity loss-
which clearly make them uncertifiable. Those and other impacts have been
well documented and both the certifying body and the FSC Board have been
made aware of the situation.
Much of Veracel's pulp ends up as paper produced and consumed in Europe,
where many concerned citizens wish to know if the paper they consume is
produced in a socially beneficial and environmentally appropriate manner.
This is what the FSC system is supposed to provide them with.
"The German consumers expect the FSC-certifiers to endorse sustainable
forest operations, not thousands of hectares of Eucalyptus monocultures
sprayed with agrochemicals like in the case of Veracel", emphasizes Peter
Gerhardt, from the German organization Robin Wood.
The FSC has been going through a two-year review of its plantations
policy as a response to widespread criticism about the issuance of FSC
certificates to large-scale monoculture plantations. The Board of
Directors adopted the final report of the FSC plantation policy review in
February 2007. The policy review recommends that FSC invest more in
preventing things going wrong, rather than trying to 'undo' damage once it
has been done. Continuing the certification assessment despite the
significant shortcomings already documented by local communities affected
by Veracel's plantations will be in clear violation of these plantation
policy review recommendations.
Jutta Kill, from FERN, stresses that "Whilst the FSC plantations review is
still ongoing, it is incomprehensible that an accredited FSC certifier
would be willing to jeopardize the trust many FSC Environmental Chamber
members have put into this process by considering the certification of one
of the most controversial plantations operations in the world."
The Timberwatch Coalition has for many years been campaigning against
socially and ecologically destructive fast wood plantations in South
Africa, many of which now have the FSC label. Wally Menne, a Timberwatch
representative says "It is shocking that SGS seems to have learned nothing
from the controversy FSC certification of fast wood plantations has
created."
Ricardo Carrere, international coordinator of the World Rainforest
Movement says that "Veracel must clearly not receive FSC certification,
but at the same time it is essential that the FSC cease to certify fast
wood plantations and that it begins to de-certify a large number of
plantations that should have never received the FSC label."
The NGOs involved in this process stress that "Certifying Veracel would be
yet another disaster for FSC."
For further information or interviews:
In the UK:
Jutta Kill, FERN, Phone: ++ 441608651864, jutta@fern.org
Simon Cousnell, The Rainforest Foundation - UK, Phone: ++ 44 207 251 6345, simonc@rainforestuk.com
In South Africa:
Wally Menne, Timberwatch Coalition, Phone: ++ 27 31 - 214648, plantnet@iafrica.com
In Uruguay:
Ricardo Carrere, World Rainforest Movement, Phone: ++ 598 2 4132989, rcarrere@wrm.org.uy
In the USA:
Orin Langelle, Global Justice Ecology Project, Phone: +1.802.482.2689, Mobile: +1.802.578.6980, langelle@globaljusticeecology.org
In Germany:
Peter Gerhardt, ROBIN WOOD, Cell-phone: ++49 160 913 62 695, tropenwald@robinwood.de
Ute Bertrand, media spokesperson ROBIN WOOD, Tel. ++49 (0) 40 / 380 892-22, presse@robinwood.de