News

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

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This link was published on 7 April 2025

SCA's letter to FSC International - Pausing of FSC certification in Sweden

  • SCA is Europe’s largest forest owner and a major timber, pulp and paper manufacturer.
  • A long-standing member of FSC, it announced its intention to temporarily pause its FSC Forest Management certification in Sweden starting June 1, 2025, due to a series of systemic challenges it sees within the current FSC framework.
    • Still supports FSC: Although SCA is leaving the Swedish FSC system on June 1st, they will remain a member, keep its Controlled Wood and Chain of Custody certifications, and maintain Forest Management certification in Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania.
    • Hopefully temporary: The pause is intended to protect SCA’s ability to meet climate and sustainability goals, not to leave FSC entirely.
    • To prompt dialogue: SCA is calling for a meeting with FSC and stakeholders in Frankfurt to work on solutions collaboratively.
  • SCA
  • Sweden
  • Europe
This resource was published on 27 June 2024

London Seminar 2024 Agenda

Agenda

We are looking forward to seeing you all in Central London (Lumier London LTD; Underwood Lofts - The Palm Room; 6-14 Underwood Street; London N1 7JQ) for our annual Seminar series . The theme we will be exploring this year is “Lifting the Cover: The Age of Transparency and Supply Chain Collaboration”, highlighting how regulation and other drivers are pushing for increased transparency, necessitating further and deeper collaboration across supply chains. There will also be opportunities to catch-up and network with representatives from the BCP publishers, pulp & paper mills, printers, NGOs and relevant industry groups.

This link was published on 8 June 2023

Status of Forest Management Certification in Poland

The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certification has been a vital component of sustainable forest management in Poland for over 25 years. Until recently, approximately two-thirds of the total forest area of 9.2 million hectares in the country were FSC-certified. The certified forests are managed by the Regional Directorates of State Forests (RDSF) and two Forest Experimental Stations under the University of Poznań.

Despite initiating dialogue in November 2022 between FSC International and Polish State Forests, six Regional Directorates of State Forests (RDSFs), representing an area of roughly 2 million hectares, have opted to discontinue FSC certification in their respective regions. The affected regions include:

  • Gdansk (FSC-certified area: 303,938 ha) - expired
  • Torun (FSC-certified area: 456,447 ha) - expired
  • Poznan (FSC-certified area: 419,535 ha) - certificate expired on 4 April, 2023
  • Warsaw (FSC-certified area: 194,960 ha) - certificate expired on 9 April, 2023
  • Radom (FSC-certified area: 325,074 ha) - certificate expired on 1 May, 2023
  • Pila (FSC-certified area: 362,770 ha) - recertification granted on 10 March, 2023; license agreement was valid until May 31, 2023

The collaboration between Polish foresters and FSC has enabled many Polish companies to grow their market reach through exporting their FSC certified products to regional and international companies. Today, Polish companies are among global leaders when it comes to the production of furniture, doors, windows, panels, and other wood-based products. There are currently 2,500 FSC Chain of Custody (CoC) certificates in Poland, making it one of the top countries for FSC CoC globally.

Kim Carstensen, Director General of FSC International, says: “We will reinforce our engagement and presence in Poland to ensure that we have a solid foundation for responsible forest management now and in the long term. We will continue to promote sustainable practices throughout the country in line with our values, while safeguarding its global credibility”.

FSC acknowledges the significant implications for certified supply in the country coupled with the existing shortages as a consequence of the Ukraine war. To address this issue, FSC is actively working alongside partners and members to develop strategic solutions to fill the supply gap.

  • FSC
  • Poland
  • Europe
This link was published on 20 September 2022

Hungary Eases Logging in Protected Forests to Tackle Gas Crunch

Hungary waived environmental regulations protecting native forests from logging, showing the increasingly extreme steps the government is willing to take to prepare for next winter’s energy shortages.

Prime Minister Viktor Orban's cabinet, citing the effects of the war in neighbouring Ukraine, loosened regulations on logging to meet increased demand for firewood as a result of surging gas and electricity prices.

  • Bloomberg
  • Hungary
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 link was published on 26 January 2021

Timber from unsustainable logging allegedly being sold in EU as ethical

According to an investigation by the environmental charity Earthsight, in the area of forest - Velykyi Bychkiv within Ukraine, loggers appear to be taking advantage of loopholes that allow for “sanitary felling” during the silent periods in the spring and early summer from 2018 to 2020. Some of the wood in question is found in the supply chain of Swedish furniture maker Ikea, who denied wrongdoing and immediately began their own investigations into all parties mentioned in Earthsight’s report.

  • Guardian
  • Ukraine
  • Europe
  • Timber
  • IKEA
  • unsustainable logging
  • wood
  • Earthsight’s report
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 event was published on 11 May 2020

China Mill Workshop (virtual) 2020 / 2020年纸厂线上工作坊

Webinar | 11 Jun 2020 13:30–16:30 Beijing

This half day on-line practical workshop aim to introduce Book Chain Project Mill Assessment Framework and publisher's expectation of mills, and share practical advice, including peer company examples, to show mills how to demonstrate good practice in responsible sourcing of fibre &/or pulp to meet publishers' expectations.

The event will primarily be conducted in Mandarin and run on the Zoom platform.

Registration closes on 8 June 2020. To cancel the event, please email quqing.huang@carnstone.com before the event starts.

为期半天的纸厂线上工作坊将主要介绍Book Chain Project纸厂评估体系、海外出版社客户对纸厂的期待以及分享纸厂同行在负责任采购方面的最佳实践。

本次活动语言主要为中文,活动将使用Zoom平台。
请在6月8日前完成报名。如需取消报名,请在活动前
邮件至quqing.huang@carnstone.com。

Welcome and a reminder of the BCP
11 Jun 2020 13:30 Beijing

We'll start the workshop by introducing the size and influence of the Book Chain Project, expectations on mills as a supplier of paper and business benefits for paper mills.

介绍Book Chain Project的项目规模和影响,该项目对纸厂供应商的期待,以及纸厂加入项目的好处。

speaker_85
Maggie Zhang
Partner 合伙人, Carnstone 凯嵘咨询

Introduction to Mill Assessment Framework (MAF)
11 Jun 2020 13:50 Beijing

In the past year, the Book Chain Project has assessed selective mills against Mill Assessment Framework (MAF), identified points of improvement and provided tools to support their development. This session will explain how MAF responds to growing pressure publishers in Europe and USA face from eNGOs and key findings from mill visits.

介绍纸厂评估体系(自2018年)如何帮助欧美出版商回应来自环保组织的压力和之前拜访多家纸厂的主要发现,以及这对纸厂之后可能面对的客户要求意味着什么。

speaker_86
Quqing Huang
Junior Partner 初级合伙人, Carnstone 凯嵘咨询

How to improve your capability to source fibre/pulp responsibly
11 Jun 2020 14:05 Beijing

We'll hear from paper mills peer company - UPM and international NGO - the Nature Conservancy (Steering group member of The Accountability Framework initiative, a coalition of organizations dedicated to protect forests and human rights by setting guidelines for delivering on companies’ ethical supply chain commitments).

This session will cover topics including what should the policy look like (elements), how to upskill your staff, how to keep up to date on sourcing countries as well as how to set on-going commitment.

介绍纸厂应该如何建立负责任采购政策、如何提高员工技能、如何持续追踪采购国相关信息,以及如何制定负责任采购目标等。

speaker_88
Jue Wang
Senior Environmental Specialist, UPM China 芬欧汇川(中国)

Wang Jue has a bachelor degree of Environmental Sciences in Nanjing University and a Master degree of Forest Sciences and Business in the University of Helsinki. After she graduated from the University of Helsinki, Wang Jue starts her career in UPM, one of the biggest forestry company in the world. She is now working in UPM Specialty Papers in Shanghai, responsible for the communications and marketing of environmental affairs and sustainability in Asia Pacific area, promoting the leading environmental concept UPM Biofore strategy, and the best practice of green paper-making.

speaker_87
Ke Dong
The Nature Conservancy 大自然保护协会

Ke is Senior Advisor in The Nature Conservancy.

Tea break
11 Jun 2020 14:45 Beijing

Please take a five-minute break and come back for next session on time.

Engage your fibre/pulp suppliers and assess sourcing risk
11 Jun 2020 14:50 Beijing

We'll hear from experts from both international NGOs, NEPCon and TFT, and paper mills peer company - TBC. This session will address how to engage your suppliers of fibre/pulp, what information you should be gathering based on potential risk, how to assess risk and how to mitigate risk.
介绍纸厂应如何与木片和木浆供应商在负责任采购方面沟通与合作,应该从供应商处收集什么信息,以及如何对供应商进行风险评估和采取对应的风险管控措施。

speaker_91
Joy Liang
Project Manager, Earthworm Foundation

Joy has worked for over 10 years in sustainable natural resources management. She has expertise in responsible-sourcing, traceability, due diligence systems and risk management. In her five year with Earthworm Foundation, she mainly works on supply chains in the pulp & paper and palm oil industries. This role involves helping members to implement their sustainable sourcing policies, conduct supply chain mapping, and to risk identification and mitigation.

speaker_90
Xinxin Zhang
East Asia Manager, NEPCon

Zhang Xinxin is responsible for NEPCon certification and audit services in China, Korea, and Japan. She is a qualified FSC FM lead auditor and FSC CoC auditor for NEPCon, had been working on FSC certification, forest legality verifications, supply chain traceability and responsible sourcing, and high conservation values forests protections in China for more than 15 years.

Why this is so important: perspective from a publisher
11 Jun 2020 15:30 Beijing

We'll hear from COO of DK/Penguin Random House on publishers expectations of paper mills.
介绍出版商如何通过收集上游林浆信息更好地管理其供应链以及对纸厂的期待和要求。

Shaun Hodgkinson
COO 首席运营官, DK/Penguin Random House DK企鹅兰登书屋

Q&A
11 Jun 2020 15:50 Beijing

This is your chance to raise questions to all speakers.
问答环节

Wrapping it all up
11 Jun 2020 16:10 Beijing

This final session will review what we’ve learnt, what we want you to now go away and do and more importantly the checklist and tools for you to take away.
回顾工作坊的主要内容,实用工具,以及出版社对纸厂下一步的要求。

speaker_93
Maggie Zhang
Partner 合伙人, Carnstone 凯嵘咨询
Type
Webinar
Date
11 Jun 2020 13:30–16:30 Beijing
This event is in the past
This link was published on 6 April 2020

Indonesia targets pulpwood, palm oil firms in civil suits over 2019 fires

Indonesia’s environment ministry will file civil lawsuits against five companies in connection with fires that razed their concessions last year. Fire season in 2019 burned an area half the size of Belgium and released double the amount of carbon dioxide as the fires in the Amazon. Officials say they are preparing both civil lawsuits — seeking fines against the pulpwood and oil palm firms blamed for the fires — and criminal charges. However, a spate of recent cases suggests the government will have a hard time getting the money, with only a tiny fraction paid out of the $231 million awarded from nine companies in similar lawsuits.

  • Mongabay
  • Belgium
  • Indonesia
  • Amazon
  • Palm Oil
  • Pulpwood
  • environment ministry
  • civil lawsuits
  • Oil Palm Firms
  • Fires
This link was published on 26 March 2020

California issues Prop 65 crystalline silica safe use determination

California’s Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment has issued a Proposition 65 safe use determination (SUD) for exposures to crystalline silica from four specific wood filler products. This determination relates to four Woodwise products, designed for use on hardwood floors, that contain crystalline silica in small amounts.

  • Chemical Watch
  • United States
  • Environmental Health Hazard Assessment
  • Safe use determination
  • crystalline silica
  • wood filler products
  • Woodwise products
  • hardwood floors
  • California