Illegal logging is destroying Europe’s last
virgin forests
How one man from a small Romanian town took on some of
Europe's biggest companies | By Alexandra Stegerean
Published
on:
Aug 27,
2021
https://www.footprintmag.net/illegal-logging-is-destroying-europes-last-remaining-virgin-forests/
Deforestation accounts for at least 15% of all
greenhouse gas emissions.
Illegal
deforestation, done too quickly for forests to regrow naturally, still takes
place in Europe, especially in Eastern European countries. Products
manufactured from illegally logged wood have made their way on the market in
the UK.
This is the
case in Romania, one of Europe’s largest timber exporters, where illegal
logging has become a thriving business. More timber is being smuggled out of
the country than exported legally. Trees are cut down for timber in large
numbers, even from national parks and protected areas, and smuggled out of
forests to be sold at a large profit, leaving behind immense areas of destroyed
forest surface. This also strongly affects the local communities and creates
imbalances in the local economy because it effectively leads to people losing
their jobs and their businesses.
Stolen Wood
I spoke to
Tiberiu Bosutar, a prominent activist who’s conducted years of investigations
on illegal logging in Romania, to find out exactly how all this wood is
‘stolen’ and transported to factories right under the authorities’ noses, as
well as what effect these illegal deforestations have had on the local
community.
Tiberiu is
from a small town in northern Romania called Moldovita and he comes from a line
of silviculturists (foresters). He was a silviculturist himself and owned his
own business, until it started becoming impossible for a wood company to make
any profit to survive. This was because larger companies began ‘coming’ to the
forests and bidding higher prices for wood. They could afford to pay these
prices because most of the companies came from abroad, and the wood in Romania
was still cheaper compared to other European countries. They could also sell
their finished products for a higher price, either in Romania or abroad, but
this wasn’t the case for local businesses.
For locals,
the price of wood kept increasing and many ‘small’ businesses, including
Tiberiu's, were ‘pushed out’ of the forest and had to close.
Local
communities, like Tiberiu’s town, Moldovita, felt outraged by what was
happening not only because these large companies were ravaging the forests,
hurting the environment and leaving behind thousands of square metres of tree
stumps, but also because their businesses, passed down to them by their fathers
and grandfathers, were dying because of this.
A small
company could invest all of its money in manufacturing wood products but, at
the end of the day, it was losing money. When Tiberiu noticed this, he figured
out there had to be something wrong.
He
researched how much forest surface was officially being felled and how much
timber was being exported, and added up the numbers. They don’t match up. More
wood might be leaving the forests than what was legally documented.
He decided
to install cameras on a building on the main road of Moldovita, where he owned
a flat, by which all trucks would pass on their way out of the forest, to see
how many trucks circulated in a day. He also kept track of their number plates
and searched for their transportation records.
Tiberiu
found that the trucks would be issued a single transport document for the span
of a few hours, but during that time, each of them would go back and forth and
collecting multiple loads of timber. This was despite only declaring one
transportation, and therefore one load of timber, in the official database. He
also found that some of the trucks were documented in the database as
transporting ‘waste’ from logging (such as leaves, branches and scraps) when,
in reality, they were loaded with timber.
This began
to explain the massive areas of deforested land that were appearing overnight
in Romania, and how these large companies could afford to pay much higher
prices for wood than local businesses.
One tree per second
Several
companies have been accused of using wood logged illegally from ancient and
virgin forests and protected areas in Romania, including Swedish giant Ikea.
In 2016,
Ikea admitted to sourcing timber from Holzindustrie Schweighofer, an Austrian
company that dominates the timber industry in Romania. Despite their pledge not
to source wood from national parks, from 2017 to 2018 they were still recorded
taking over 35.000 m³ of timber from two national parks in Romania, Calimani
and Rodnei Mountains.
An
investigation conducted by Earthsight found wood obtained from illegal logging
in a number of Ikea products, such as the best-seller Ingolf dining chair and
the famous Terje folding chair.
Ikea is the
largest consumer of wood in the world. In 2019, Ikea used 21 million m³ of
logs, or one tree per second, according to Earthsight. And every year, the
company needs about 2 million more trees than it did the year before.
In order to
keep manufacturing its signature low-price furniture, it sources these extra
trees in Eastern European countries like Romania, Ukraine and even Russia. The
company has even been accused of bribing corrupt politicians in exchange for
access to cheap wood.
In 2005,
Romania hosted two-thirds of Europe’s last remaining virgin forests. It is
estimated that Romania has since lost two-thirds of its primary forest in the
last decade, due to illegal logging.
Tracking the trucks
Tiberiu
showed his findings to the authorities but, for a long time, he was not being
taken seriously, so he began appealing to people through the media and even
formed his own group on Facebook, where he posted all the evidence he’d
accumulated over the years.
His voice
began to be heard all over the country and his protests inspired other protests
as people everywhere were shocked to find out the extent to which forests were
being exploited. Authorities finally began making some changes.
A new
tracking system was implemented in Romania for the trucks that transport wood.
SUMAL 2.0, implemented on February 1st 2021, requires drivers to fill in
documents online instead of on paper and to upload pictures taken on the spot
of the loaded truck from the front, side and back, as well as pictures of the
mileage on the truck. This thorough system allows for real-time supervision of
how much wood is cut from the forest and taken to a deposit or a company.
What's more, all of this data is available online to the public. Holzindustrie
Schweighofer also implemented a similar system to monitor its own trucks.
According
to Tiberiu’s calculations, these measures alone have reduced illegal logging by
50% since they were officiated.
But the
battle is far from over. As Tiberiu says, ‘the theft of wood [also] needs to be
stopped from inside the forests’.
Article
written by Alexandra Stegerean (@alexandrastege)
Photo by
Vlad Sargu on Unsplash
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