This bulletin was published on 30 June
Steven Kamenar
These country-specific guides have been developed by the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) and the Book Chain Project (BCP) to support companies in strengthening their due diligence processes across paper supply chains.
Each guide provides an overview of key documentation that may be collected to demonstrate compliance with national legal requirements in high-risk sourcing countries (Argentina, Brazil, India, Malaysia, Mozambique and Thailand). In addition, the guides outline practical approaches to document verification, including how to assess the validity, relevance, and reliability of information, as well as how to cross-check evidence across multiple sources.
The Book Chain Project and its members are committed to enhanced due diligence and responsible sourcing, even if printed materials are no longer within the scope of the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR). These guides are made publicly available, in both English and local languages, to support ongoing efforts to improve supply chain transparency and reduce risks of deforestation and forest degradation.
Please find the country guides below:
This resource was published on 30 June
Technical Document
This guide provides an overview of key documentation that may be collected to demonstrate compliance with national legal requirements in Thailand. In addition, the guide outlines practical approaches to document verification, including how to assess the validity, relevance, and reliability of information, as well as how to cross-check evidence across multiple sources.
This link was published on 24 December 2019
The trend of setting up a national inventory of chemicals – already seen in China, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan – is moving south. The Philippines and Vietnam have existing inventories, while Laos, Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia also have plans for one.
Despite regulatory hurdles that might have caused due to disparate regulations and approaches across the region, the overall trend – if slower than other regions – is a shift in focus from primarily GHS-based requirements towards more comprehensive, risk-based chemicals management regimes that mandate registration before use.
- South East Asia & Indian Continent
- GHS-based requirements
- risk-based chemicals
This link was published on 10 August 2018
The rise of robots in manufacturing in Southeast Asia is likely to fuel modern-day slavery as workers who end up unemployed due to automation face abuses competing for a shrinking pool of low-paid jobs in a “race to the bottom”. Especially, the workers in Cambodia, Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam and the Philippines — at least 137 million people — risk losing their jobs because of the automation in the next two decades. Those workers are more vulnerable to workplace abuses as they jostle for fewer jobs at lower wages.
- South East Asia & Indian Continent
- modern slavery
- Asia
- factory workers
- abuse
- robots
- manufacturing
- workplace abuse
- lower wages
This link was published on 5 September 2017
Burmese migrants charged with defamation after alleging labour abuses in Thailand’s multimillion-pound poultry export industry. The Burmese migrants allege they were forced to work 22-hour days at Thammakaset Farm 2, at times having to sleep in the chicken sheds with 30,000 hens. They also said their freedom of movement was severely restricted. Thailand’s important and well publicised efforts to systematically address migrant worker exploitation are seriously undermined as migrants cannot speak up.
- multimillion-pound poultry export industry
- Burmese migrants
- Thammakaset Farm 2
This link was published on 22 March 2017
Myanmar’s Ministry of Commerce has revealed that US$ 17 million worth of timber was recently found to have been smuggled from Myanmar to China via illegal routes avoiding official checkpoints along the road to Muse, Myanmar's border town with China. Most of Myanmar’s trade is with China and Thailand and with Chinese import restrictions on some agricultural products from Myanmar, local exporters find it difficult to get health recommendations from China for their exports, creating a growing illegal trade.
This link was published on 21 January 2016
According to the World Bank, forest fires in Indonesia last year caused the country at least $16 billion economic losses, which is equivalent to 1.9 percent of its GDP. The haze caused by the fire blanketed Singapore, parts of Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand in September and October, which was cleared by the rainy season in early November. Many of the fires were set by smallholders and companies to clear land for agriculture, especially palm oil, which makes it difficult for Indonesian authorities to respond to the fires.
- World Bank
- Agriculture
- Palm Oil
- Smallholders
- Forest fires
This link was published on 26 February 2015
While estimates from various UN bodies claim “decreasing deforestation rates and increased afforestation” over recent years, a new study in the journal Geophysical Research Letters indicates a 62% acceleration in net deforestation in the humid tropics from the 1990s to the 2000s. The new study used satellite images to examine the tropical forests of 34 countries, including Brazil, Indonesia and Thailand, that collectively house 80 percent of the world’s tropical forest area. Brazil “dominated” tropical forest losses, according to the study, showing a 33 percent acceleration in the amount of forest that was lost over the time period. According to the researchers the difference is because the UN mostly uses country based self-reporting rather than analysis of satellite data. The drought currently hitting Brazil has in part been blamed on deforestation.
- Deforestation
- Forests
- Tropical Forests
- Afforestation
- Geophysical Research Letters
- Examine
This link was published on 19 April 2014
Thailand's Dong Phayayen-Khoyai Forest Complex is in danger of losing its World Heritage status because illegal logging is destroying the forest. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) says there is ineffective management to prevent the illegal logging of Siamese rosewood that was once abundant in the area. The IUCN is also concerned about plans to build a hydroelectric dam in the forest although the director of the Cultural and Natural Environmental Management Bureau said that there is a high possibility that the construction of the dam will not go ahead.
- Illegal logging
- Forests
- Dong Phayayen-Khoyai Forest Complex
- Cultural and Natural Environmental Management
This link was published on 15 April 2014
A new Global Witness report, ‘Deadly Environment’, shows there has been a surge in the killing of activists protecting land rights and the environment over the past decade with three times as many deaths in 2012 compared to the previous 10 years. Between 2002 and 2013, at least 908 activists were killed in 35 countries with only 10 convictions. The most deadly countries in the scope of the report were Brazil (448 since 2002), Honduras (109), Philippines (67), Peru (58) and Thailand (16). The deaths are linked to activism against a range of activities including illegal logging, cattle ranching, soy bean farming, mining and the building of hydroelectric dams.
- Illegal logging
- Deadly Environment
- Cattle Ranching
- Soy Bean Farming