Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Attacking the demand side of deforestation

June 16, 2009
From: mongabay.com

A new UK government-sponsored initiative seeks to address the demand side of deforestation by identifying how an organization's activities and supply chains contribute to forest destruction.

The initiative, called the Forest Footprint Disclosure Project (FFD Project), will ask companies to "disclose how their operations and supply chains are impacting forests worldwide, and what is being done to manage those impacts responsibly."

The disclosure information will be reported on an annual basis, enabling investors to identify possible risks related to a company’s "forest footprint." Disclosure will also provide consumers with information to make better informed decisions about the products they purchase.

Participation in the project is free, but companies will have to cover the cost of providing supply chain information. The scheme is modeled after the Carbon Disclosure Project, which asks companies to detail carbon emissions throughout their supply chain.

Today's unveiling of the project comes just two weeks after some of the world's largest consumer products brands were scandalized by a Greenpeace report that linked their suppliers to illegal Amazon deforestation. Greenpeace tracked beef and leather produced on Amazon rainforest lands through the supply chain to Brazilian cattle companies which provide raw materials to the likes of Nike, Toyota, Ikea, and others. Several companies—including Wal-Mart, Carrefour and Pão de Açúcar—have already suspended contracts with tainted suppliers, while the World Bank has revoked a loan to to Brazilian cattle giant Bertin.

The FFD Project aims to help companies avoid such surprises in the future.

"[Participating companies] will also gain a better understanding of their own environmental dependencies, and how the changing climate and new regulatory frameworks could affect access to resources and the cost of doing business in the long term," stated the FFD Project website.

Twelve major financial companies with assets of over $1.3 trillion have already agreed to participate. Invitations to participate will be sent to some 200 companies with a "high potential forest footprint."

Deforestation on a global scale

Controlling deforestation is imperative to addressing climate change. The annual destruction of 13 million hectares of forest accounts for nearly one-fifth of global greenhouse gas emissions, a greater share than all the world's trucks, cars, ships, and airplanes combined.

While net forest loss has remained relatively constant over the past twenty years, there have been two signifcant shifts since the late 1980s: (1) old-growth forests are being replaced by plantations and degraded, logged-over forests; and (2) forest clearing is increasingly driven by industry rather than subsistence activities.

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