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The Proof Is In The Forest PDF Print E-mail
Dogwood Alliance’s Response to International Paper’s Recent Forest Stewardship Council Certification Announcement

Recently International Paper (IP), the world’s largest paper producer and the biggest paper producer in the Southern US, was tagged  a top ten corporate greenwasher by Wall Street 24/7 a company providing analysis and commentary for US and global equity investors.  And indeed again and again over the years we have seen and heard lots of promotional noise from the company without true green progress to back it up.

Central to IP’s greenwashing push to present itself as a sustainability leader is its decade long funding and promotion of the highly-criticized, good ditch and drain photo.jpgindustry-driven forest certification system, the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI):  SFI is widely criticized by the global environmental community as a greenwashing tool that allows companies to slap a green label on products made from business-as-usual industrial forestry practices like large-scale clearcutting, the conversion of natural forests to monoculture tree plantations and the routine use of toxic fertilizers and herbicides that are destroying important ecosystems in North America, including in the Southern US, the largest paper producing region in the world.

This week, IP announced Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) Chain of Custody certification at a number of its mills in the US claiming “the largest FSC manufacturing platform across the globe.”  Contrary to SFI, FSC is the only forest products certification system in existence today that is supported by the broader conservation community, including Dogwood Alliance.  It is the only certification system that provides meaningful protection for endangered forests and restrictions on the conversion of natural forests to plantations, large-scale clearcutting and the use of chemicals in plantations. 

So, has IP seen the light or is this just another attempt at greenwashing? 

One thing is clear.  Over the past two years, IP has been feeling the pressure about forest sustainability issues from all directions – environmental groups, its customers and even its competitors.  As a direct result of Dogwood Alliance’s campaign targeting IP’s customers in the office supply industry and, more recently large IP customers of paper packaging,  many  of IP’s largest customers including Staples, OfficeMax, Universal Music Group, Tetra Pak ….and others) have been pushing the company to produce FSC certified products.

In addition to market demand and direct pressure from large customers, a major competitor– Domtar – has positioned itself as a market leader when it comes to producing FSC certified paper in the office supply market.  Two years ago, Domtar bought a number of mills from Weyerhaeuser in the Southern US that produce office paper, making it the largest manufacturer of office paper in the world.  Just last month, the Canadian company announced that it achieved FSC Chain of Custody certification at four of its five mills in the Southern US –IP’s home turf.   

So, IP is now vying for a leadership position and scrambling to satisfy its customers who want FSC certified paper products.  Through its announcement this week, IP appears to concede that it has failed to convince the marketplace that SFI certification is a credible measure of sustainability -- an interesting place to be in light of its heavy investment in SFI certification.  On the one hand, the announcement by IP represents huge movement by the world’s largest paper company and on its surface may suggest that perhaps IP has jumped ahead of Domtar as the FSC market leader.  On the other hand a closer look at what FSC chain of custody certification really means (or doesn’t mean) is important.  Buyers beware.

The fact that IP now has FSC chain of custody certification at some of its facilities means simply that it has the appropriate mechanisms in place to be able to track FSC certified fiber from the forest, through the mills and to an end product.  It does not mean that IP is actually moving FSC certified fiber through its mills or producing any FSC certified products.  Most importantly, it does not mean that anything at all has changed in the forest. 

Unlike Domtar, which recognizes FSC as a better certification system than SFI, actually produces FSC certified products at its mills and actively partners with conservation groups and others to work towards expanding FSC on the ground in the forest where it matters most, IP continues to promote SFI as equal, hasn’t produced one FSC certified product to date and refuses to work with conservation groups on expanding FSC on the ground.   So, while IP is moving in response to market pressure, there is no tangible evidence yet that IP is in fact changing its behavior.  While IP now has the keys to the Prius (FSC) it is still driving a Hummer (SFI). 

IP must continue to be held accountable for the forest destruction in the Southern US and around the world that results from its production of paper.  While IP may appear to be moving, it hasn’t changed anything on the ground.  Keeping the market pressure on IP is critical to ensuring that this week’s big announcement isn’t just another attempt at greenwashing.  IP must clearly understand that until it takes tangible action that results in real improvements on the ground in the forests where it sources fiber it will continue to be branded as the industry laggard when it comes to forest sustainability. 

Danna Smith

Cofounder and Acting Executive Director

Dogwood Alliance

 

 

 

 

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I disagree with you about SFI
written by Glenn Hughes, July 02, 2009
Having researched and written on forest certification issues, I disagree with the anti-SFI sentiment for several reasons:
1. both FSC and SFI are *expensive* systems to implement, and private landowners (who own 70% of the forestland in the South) are NOT interested in incurring significant additional costs ($5-10/acre)for certification. Large landowners with tens of thousands of acres can take advantage of economies of scale and reduce costs significantly; the regular landowner is unable to do so with either FSC or SFI. Can we agree on this?
2. SFI was endorsed as a valid certification system by the Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification, a worldwide system designed to "certify the certifiers."
3. SFI has diverse representation on its External Review Panel (google it)
4. SFI has spent thousands of hours training loggers in my area (south Mississippi); FSC has trained zero, zip, nada.
5. FSC in my area is non-existent. We are a key timber-producing region, and a good friend of mine works for a company doing FSC certification work. They are not interested in small ownerships, as there is no money in it. Again, where does that leave most landowners? The American Tree Farm System is the logical fist step for most landowners interested in being certified.
6. Give the herbicide thing a rest. We have severe problems with cogongrass, tallowtree, Japanese climbing fern, privet, kudzu, and other invasive species. Groups such as The Nature Conservancy use herbicide regularly to gain control of their land. If you can figure how to kill the above species without using herbicides, please let us know. We'd love to use the money elsewhere.

A useful publication for private landowners and others interested in forest certification is at this link:
http://msucares.com/pubs/publications/p2447.pdf

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Agree to disagree on SFI & Herbicides
written by ScotQ, July 17, 2009
Glenn,

As always we appreciate your comments as you keep us on our toes, unfortunately, as per usual, we are just going to have to agree to disagree.

1. FSC & SFI are currently cost-prohibitive for small landowners, that is why FSC is working on umbrella certification in order to help get group certificates for landowners and reduce costs. It has always perplexed me as well as to why the paper industry has not kicked in to help get landowners certified as that would provide them the fiber they need to sell fsc labeled products. You should approach the companies around you and ask.

2. PEFC has as many or more detractors than the SFI does, so their seal of approval is meaningless to the conservation community. They allow the same business as usual practices let through by SFI - large-scale clearcutting, conversion, logging of endangered forests, and use of toxics in forest management.

3. SFI may have that, but it does not change the fact that they continue to give their stamp of approval to the outmoded and outlandish practices detailed above. A good board that does not change anything is not worth the ink written on the paper.

4. Contact FSC, they might just be interested in trainings in your area, you don't know until you ask.

5. See #1

6. Herbicides in forest management have long been a problem. You misunderstand if you think that our focus is on invasive control. Our focus is on all of the chemicals used in plantation management to kill all competition to the planted pine. A sterile plantation is just that, sterile, meaning that those chemicals have killed everything else that should or could be living there. Not only that, but start to look closer into the human health impacts. Any of that gets into water supply from aerial application and we are in trouble. For the latest science from this week on the hazards of glyphosate, check out: http://www.scientificamerican....erbicide-p

Thanks again for your engagement and best regards.
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