According to a newly released report from a non-profit organization called Forest Trends, in the past few years, imports of rosewood, collectively known as hongmu, from Africa surged, which are prized by Chinese furniture manufacturers who use them to make products that are highly coveted status symbols.
News
Collected news links from external sources related to topics concerning the Book Chain Project.
China’s demand for rosewood is destroying forests in Southeast Asia and, increasingly, in Africa
Mongabay, 23 Dec 2015
Laos Launches Plan to Stem Illegal Logging After Revenue Drop
Radio Free Asia, 28 Jul 2014
Recognising the severe impact illegal logging is having on tax revenue generation, the Lao government has launched a pilot program to track the source of timber from sawmills and wood-processing plants. Demand for the valuable hongmu (redwood) timber from neighbouring China is thought to be driving illegal logging in the country. The pilot program requires all logs in sawmills and wood-processing plants to be inspected before export and to lay a framework for documentation that they are derived from legal sources, according to the reports.