Monday, July 13, 2009
Environmental groups increasingly powerful, says researcher
Rhett Butler in Mongabay: With deforestation increasingly driven by industrial actors, rather than subsistence farmers, tropical timber managers should be aware of the growing clout of environmental groups in swaying public opinion, says a forest expert from the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, writing in the International Tropical Timber Organization's July Tropical Forest Update.
"The tropical timber industry can expect an increasingly hard line from environmental groups and consumers, as part of a broader effort to combat the growing impacts on forests of industrialization and globalization," writes William F. Laurance. "Although many in the tropical timber industry believe a 'use it or lose it' approach is the best way to promote natural forest maintenance, the industry is one of the most conspicuous—and therefore vulnerable—exploiters of forests.
In recent years, members of the industry have teamed with environmental groups on initiatives like the Forest Stewardship Council, a certification scheme that aims to improve the sustainability of logging operations. But activists have been increasingly questioning the credibility of FSC … Laurance says that the industry needs to make a serious commitment to sustainability if it wants to avoid criticism.
"Unless it moves aggressively toward effective self-policing, it will increasingly find itself the target of adverse actions and publicity….”…
Logging in Oregon, circa 1905
"The tropical timber industry can expect an increasingly hard line from environmental groups and consumers, as part of a broader effort to combat the growing impacts on forests of industrialization and globalization," writes William F. Laurance. "Although many in the tropical timber industry believe a 'use it or lose it' approach is the best way to promote natural forest maintenance, the industry is one of the most conspicuous—and therefore vulnerable—exploiters of forests.
In recent years, members of the industry have teamed with environmental groups on initiatives like the Forest Stewardship Council, a certification scheme that aims to improve the sustainability of logging operations. But activists have been increasingly questioning the credibility of FSC … Laurance says that the industry needs to make a serious commitment to sustainability if it wants to avoid criticism.
"Unless it moves aggressively toward effective self-policing, it will increasingly find itself the target of adverse actions and publicity….”…
Logging in Oregon, circa 1905
Labels:
economics,
forests,
governance,
ngos,
policy
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