Tuesday, April 01, 2008

Illegal logging hits Laos forests

ENVIRONMENT

April 1, 2008
Supalak Ganjanakhundee
The Nation (Thailand)


Country has become a major source of timber for Vietnam's booming furniture industry

After Thailand banned logging in 1989 following the severe 1988 floods, the Thai timber industry looked to neighbouring Burma, Cambodia and Laos to supply timber to the growing wooden product industry.

Vietnam began imposing controls on logging in 1992, including an 80 per cent reduction in the logging quota and an export ban. By 1977, Vietnam shut down about three-quarters of its state-run forestry enterprise.

Like Thailand, Vietnam turned to neighbours to supply its fast-growing wooden furniture industry. Vietnam, which produces furniture mostly for export, consumes much more wood than Thailand, where it is used mostly for domestic consumption. On supply side, Laos has banned log exports since 1999 and ordered a reduction of sawn timber exports in 2001.

However, trucks loaded with logs and sawn timber, mostly illegal, are commonly seen at border checkpoints entering Thailand and Vietnam.

An undercover investigation by United Kingdom-based Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) and Indonesian conservationist Telapak said illegal logging and timber smuggling is widespread in Laos.

In 2006 alone, about 600,000 cubic metres of logs, with a market value of US$250 million (Bt7.9 billion), were cut illegally in Laos, EIA representative Julian Newman said.

Protected areas are often the target for illegal logging operations, such as the Dong Amphan National Protected Areas in southern Attapeu province. Laos has many laws and regulations to control forestry industry but implementation is confused and enforcement is weak.

Last year, the government declared timber for export must be 100 per cent finished products.

A series of regulations ended wood quotas to provincial authorities, restricting the right to export timber and wood products to the government.

However such laws and regulations have exceptions for development projects such as hydro-electric dams where logging is allowed in proposed inundated areas.

Smuggling of logs across the border, mainly to Vietnam, is facilitated by connections with military and officers on both sides of the border, the EIA-Telapak report said.

"In Laos, the military remains a powerful institution with wide business interests, including logging, and has close links with its Vietnamese counterpart," the report said.

Vietnam has imposed restrictions on the forestry industry, reducing the supply of timber cut in natural forest from 520,000 cubic metres in 1997, when the policy was enforced, to 150,000 cubic metres last year.

Despite such restrictions, Vietnam has rapidly developed a dynamic wood-processing industry and has in the last decade earned a reputation as a world-class furniture producer, exporting 90 per cent of its products to 120 countries, including the United States, Japan, UK, Germany, France and China.

Vietnam's furniture exports reached $2.4 billion last year and the export value is estimated at $3 billion this year, making Vietnam the world's fourth-largest exporter of wood products.

With a wide gap between demand for products and supply of raw material, Vietnam has emerged as a major destination for illegal timber, the EIA-Telapak report said.

Laos is a major source of smuggled timber due to geographical proximity and close political relations between the two governments and militaries.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

This is a great chance for Laos to benefit from their natural resources just like anyone else. Wood is no difference from oil. No one ever told the Saudi not to sell their oil.

Anonymous said...

A few people in Cambodia have eyes but can't see, have ears but can't hear, have harts but don't know how to love or care. Global warming leading to unseasonal rains, floods, hot, dry, lack of water as seen them every. We are already in hells, more cutting of trees will put us deeper in hell. Those that suffer the most are those who are in power and the wealthiest. Poor people have nothing to loose we careless. Cut more wood for money please. 100% behind the destroying of natureal resources to more money and more money so all of them will go to hell faster. Chopping wood that made the ship to sell so the boat will sink quicker with your gold and diamond.....

Anonymous said...

Well if cut wood will put us in hell, why then the US is still here. They cut and burnt more wood than anyone else on the planet.