You are here: Home» Membership» NZFFA Member Blogs» Dean Satchell's blog» Sustainable management or tropical rainforest destruction?

Sustainable management or tropical rainforest destruction?

Saturday, August 29, 2015, Dean Satchell's blog

A New Zealand delegation made up of members of the NZ Imported Tropical Timber Group, representing buyers of tropical rainforest timber, recently visited the Solomon Islands to check out supplies of sawn timber. The visit was facilitated by the Pacific Horticultural and Agricultural Market Access (PHAMA) Program, an aid project funded by the Australian and New Zealand Governments.

Now, New Zealand currently imports $4 million worth of timber from the Solomon Islands, so I'm not sure why we would provide further aid to "strengthen the sawn timber industry in the Solomon Islands" under the guise of sustainable management of tropical timber. 

New Zealand consumers want assurances that the timber products they buy have been sourced from legally and sustainably managed forests. Despite the value of trade in sawn timber from the Solomon Islands increasing significantly over the past 10 years, only now is a government-funded PHAMA aid initiative stepping in by funding a visit by our timber importers to check out the product and be seen to take the initiative, the "important first step towards sustainable forest management". This initiative is to develop a system of third party legality assurance over the next two years. Wow, sounds like a good deal to me, the importers get a NZ taxpayer funded trip to build relationships with their suppliers and seek an assurance their supplies will grow, with no assurance whatsoever of "sustainable forest management", but only an audit body to ensure eventually the timber will be legal.

Sounds like a pretty good deal for the importers, but what I'd like to know is what level of rainforest destruction is not legal in the Solomon Islands. New Zealand has strict rules around harvesting natural forest and the playing field will only be level when other countries practice truly sustainable forest management, like we do.

Dean Satchell
chair, Farm Forestry Timbers Society


One post

Post from Vaughan Kearns on July 25, 2016 at 10:06PM

One only has to look at a google map of the various islands in the Solomons group to see at reasonably good detail that the majority of forest is already clear felled and replaced with palm plantations for palm oil. The balance is severely modified and cut over. However it must be said that these forests can recover quite quickly if given the opportunity. After the end of the Second World War vast areas of these islands were totally denuded but had subsequently recovered.

Disclaimer: Personal views expressed in this blog are those of the writers and do not necessarily represent those of the NZ Farm Forestry Association.

Farm Forestry - Headlines

Article archive »