News

Collected bulletins, events and resources from Book Chain Project together with news links from external sources.

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This event was published on 25 June 2025

Introduction to the BCP EUDR Solution for Mills and Suppliers: Option 1

Webinar | 25 Jun 2025 09:00–10:00 London

Join us for a webinar covering the Book Chain Project EUDR Solution Development, which will cover:

  • Introduction: explain how we got there and why we think a sector led approach is important. We will also outline the publishers who have agreed to support us and the partners we are working with.

  • Solution Overview: details on the functionality and development process of the solution. Additionally, we will specify the required inputs and actions for mills, printers, and other suppliers and outline how the solution will assist these stakeholders in meeting the EUDR requirements.

  • Q&A: BCP team to answer any questions regarding the BCP EUDR solution development and implementation.

The Webinar will be held virtually, and the registered users will receive the webinar joining details the day before the webinar date.

We will be hosting two identical webinars to accommodate time zones and so please only register for one session. Please note that if you cannot attend, the webinar will be recorded and made available under the resources section of the BCP site.

We recommend that mills and suppliers share this invite with those who are responsible for or involved in EUDR compliance.

Notes

  • If you are already a BCP user, please log in to the system before registering.
  • If you are not a BCP user and would like to attend the webinar, please email Victoria and Damien with your name and company information.
  • Please fill in your company name completely, as we will share the attendee list with publishers after the event.
Type
Webinar
Date
25 Jun 2025 09:00–10:00 London
This event is in the past
This event was published on 25 June 2025

Introduction to the BCP EUDR Solution for Mills and Suppliers: Option 2

Webinar | 26 Jun 2025 15:00–16:00 London

Join us for a webinar covering the Book Chain Project EUDR Solution Development, which will cover:

  • Introduction: explain how we got there and why we think a sector led approach is important. We will also outline the publishers who have agreed to support us and the partners we are working with.

  • Solution Overview: details on the functionality and development process of the solution. Additionally, we will specify the required inputs and actions for mills, printers, and other suppliers and outline how the solution will assist these stakeholders in meeting the EUDR requirements.

  • Q&A: BCP team to answer any questions regarding the BCP EUDR solution development and implementation.

The Webinar will be held virtually, and the registered users will receive the webinar joining details the day before the webinar date.

We will be hosting two identical webinars to accommodate time zones and so please only register for one session. Please note that if you cannot attend, the webinar will be recorded and made available under the resources section of the BCP site.

We recommend that mills and suppliers share this invite with those who are responsible for or involved in EUDR compliance.

Notes

  • If you are already a BCP user, please log in to the system before registering.
  • If you are not a BCP user and would like to attend the webinar, please email Victoria and Damien with your name and company information.
  • Please fill in your company name completely, as we will share the attendee list with publishers after the event.
Type
Webinar
Date
26 Jun 2025 15:00–16:00 London
This event is in the past
This resource was published on 18 October 2024
Supplier Code Of Conduct

Supplier Code Of Conduct

Technical Document

The Book Chain Project provides a publishing industry Code of Conduct for labour and environmental standards. It states the publishers’ commitments to their suppliers and what they expect from their suppliers in return. The Code of Conduct is based on existing internationally-recognized Codes and Laws. Suppliers that do not already have an ethical audit can ask for a SMETA audit that is audited against this Code of Conduct.

Select your preferred language from the options below
This resource was published on 30 November 2023
GHG Emissions Calculation: Guidance for the Publishing Industry

GHG Emissions Calculation: Guidance for the Publishing Industry

Technical Document

This document provides detailed guidance for publishers to calculate GHG emissions in their own operations and upstream and downstream value chains. It includes methodologies and examples consistent with the Greenhouse Gas Protocol Corporate Standard, for calculating emissions of each Scope and Category.

This link was published on 29 December 2021

WWF urges companies to ban wood sourcing from salvage logging in Russia

WWF-Russia recommends companies to not source nor use wood obtained from salvage logging, and to take additional measures to verify the legality of sanitary wood felling, such as increasing company field audits, until the risk of illegal wood from salvage logging entering supply chains has been minimised drastically.

  • WWF
  • Russia
This resource was published on 27 March 2021

Certification Robustness

Report

This document critically evaluates the robustness of the two main forest certification systems – FSC and PEFC – in ten countries. We started by building up an overview of country-specific forest risks for each country based on reputable sources such as Chatham House, Preferred by Nature and Earthsight. We then assessed the applicable FSC and PEFC standards against the country risk profile, highlighting key gaps.

The countries included are: Brazil, Czech Republic, Hungary, Indonesia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Russia, Slovakia, and Ukraine.

We recommend that this document is used to understand the level of certification robustness in priority countries, as a basis for setting sourcing policies based on a company's risk appetite.

This link was published on 11 March 2021

L'Oréal USA joins U.S. plastics pact to accelerate progress toward American circular economy for plastic

L’Oréal USA announced a new partnership with the U.S. Plastics Pact, a new initiative of over 60 organisations that aims to reduce plastic waste. To join the Pact, L’Oréal committed to deliver the following four targets:

  1. Define a list of packaging to be designated as problematic or unnecessary by 2021 and take measures to eliminate them by 2025.
  2. By 2025, all plastic packaging is 100% reusable, recyclable, or compostable.
  3. By 2025, undertake ambitious actions to effectively recycle or compost 50% of plastic packaging.
  4. By 2025, the average recycled content or responsibly sourced bio-based content in plastic packaging will be 30%.
  • LorealUSA
  • plastic packaging
  • plastic waste
  • L’Oréal USA
  • U.S. Plastics Pact
  • reusable
  • recyclable
  • compostable
This link was published on 26 January 2021

Unilever touts supply chain mapping pilot in fresh bid to tackle deforestation

Unilever is to partner with U.S. tech company Orbital Insight on a pilot project to trace agricultural commodities sourced, especially palm oil. It claims to be using geolocation data and satellite imagery to identify the individual farms and plantations supplying the palm oil mills in its extended supply chain. The pilot project will be tested out at palm oils mills in Indonesia and soy mills in Brazil, working jointly with its established supply chain monitoring projects.

  • BusinessGreen
  • Brazil
  • Indonesia
  • Plantation
  • Palm Oil
  • Unilever
  • U.S. tech company Orbital
  • Orbital
  • agricultural commodities
  • geolocation data
  • satellite imagery
  • Farms
  • extended supply chain
  • The Pilot Project
  • supply chain monitoring projects
This link was published on 25 June 2020

FLATPÅCKED FÖRESTS: IKEA’s illegal timber problem and the flawed green label behind it

This report by independent environmental charity Earthsight finds illegal logging in FSC-certified supply chains in Ukraine. Focussed on the Carpathian forests, it found around 100 sites are being felled illegally each spring, when silence periods should protect several endangered animal species including brown bears, wolves and Eurasian lynx. While regulations require Environmental Impact Assessments (EIAs) before sanitary felling is conducted, no EIAs were found to have been carried out. Evidence sited by Earthsight includes the Ukrainian State Environmental Inspectorate (SEI), local environmental organisations, and research commissioned by WWF Germany.

Earthsight claims this illegal logging has not been picked up in FSC audits because of systematic issues with FSC that go beyond Ukraine: conflicts of interest as auditing bodies are paid by the logging companies they certify; inadequate oversight by Assurance Services International (ASI) which should be holding the auditing bodies to account but is argued to have failed to do so. The report documents a wide array of cases where FSC-certified firms have been accused of illegal logging, clearance of High Conservation Value (HCV) forests, and human rights abuses from all over the world – including in places such as Brazil, China, Congo, Indonesia, Peru, Romania, Russia, Ukraine. Earthsight highlights that FSC has only investigated 13 companies in its 27-year history – 0.02% of the more than 44,000 it has certified.

In response, FSC states it is fully aware of the issues in Ukraine, and insists that whenever illicit acts are identified or reported they are investigated. IKEA says it has started its own investigations, commissioned audits from a 3rd-party independent audit company, asked questions to ASI, and pledges that if any illegal wood is indicated in its product it will take immediate action.

Earthsight’s report focuses on IKEA because, as the biggest buyer of wood in the world, it has the most influence to drive positive change. However, the issues found by Earthsight apply to the publishing industry as much as they do to IKEA. Therefore, the Book Chain Project will further look into Earthsight’s findings and update you as soon as we decide what further action to take.

  • Earthsight
  • Ukraine
  • Europe
  • FSC
  • Illegal logging
  • Corruption
  • Human Rights Issues
This resource was published on 12 May 2020

CDP Forests - How to achieve leadership

Briefing Document

The high-profile clearance of the Amazon rainforest late last year and the Australian bushfires this year made headlines around the world, putting deforestation at the top of the agenda. Together with NGOs, investors are pushing for greater transparency and action on this issue from businesses through investor-led initiatives such as CDP. This document looks into the annual CDP reporting process and what is required of a company to be considered a leader in the CDP Forests questionnaire.