“Eco-friendly and sustainable” – Japanese retailers advertising Ta Ann wood products highlight it Tasmanian origin |
Last week Ta Ann accused The Green Party in Tasmania
of false advertising over logging in Sarawak.
But now advertisements promoting Ta
Ann’s products as ’Eco-wood’ have been challenged by a
devastating expose of the company’s own role in Tasmania!
The report,
published today by the Huon Valley Environment Centre of Tasmania, spells out
Ta Ann’s hypocrisy and it is uncompromisingly titled “Behind the Veneer: Forest destruction and Ta
Ann Tasmania’s lies”. [click for report]
Over 50 pages, the troubling
expose details how the Sarawak timber giant’s decision to invest in
Tasmania was specifically aimed at targeting the growing market for
environmentally friendly, sustainable wood products, but has ended up deceiving
consumers.
Why
Tasmania?
“EIDAI is proud of our ECO-friendly flooring product” – Japanese advertisement for Ta Ann veneer panels sourced in Tasmania |
As Ta Ann
boss, Hamed Sepawi, himself confessed in 2006, Sarawak hasalmost completely run out of accessible timber, after
30 years of unrestrained logging by his own cousin and benefactor the
Chief Minister.
Tasmania still has extensive hardwood jungles
however, and remains one of the most important areas of natural wildlife world
wide.
Even more crucially, Australia has received limited
accreditation for sustainable timber, compared to Sarawak which
is notorious for its destruction of the Borneo jungle.
Hence the constant highlighting of Tasmania as the
source of Ta Ann’s new ‘environmentally conscious’ operations.
However,
as the investigation makes clear, NONE of
the wood that Ta Ann has so far used from Tasmania qualifies as sustainable.
In fact, ALL of
the logs so far taken by the company have come from old growth forests, many in
high conservation value areas that form crucial habitats for some of the
world’s most endangered species. These include Tasmania’s Wedge
Tailed Eagle, the Quoll and the Tasmanian Devil.
And NO plantation
wood is being used by Ta Ann in its veneer processing mills in Tasmania.
Jenny Webber from the Huon Valley Environment
Centre (HVEC) said in a press release today:
“This report reveals, through Right to Information
(RTI) documents, that Ta Ann Tasmania received wood from logging areas
containing old growth forest, as defined by the Tasmanian Regional Forest
Agreement (RFA), on at least 35 occasions throughout the 2009-2011 period. Ta
Ann Tasmania is processing wood acquired from the logging of old growth
forests, high conservation value forests and forests with recognised world
heritage values in Tasmania,”
“Ta Ann’s demand for native forest wood and its
large wood supply contract is driving logging in some of Tasmania’s most
important and contentious forest areas…. Ta Ann’s operations here in
Tasmania are far from eco-friendly and must rank amongst the worst logging
practices globally”
The report points out that Ta Ann Tasmania
has in addition received timber for at least 88 logging operations in
native forests since 2008, which are defined as having ‘high conservation
value’ by ENGOs:
“Ta Ann’s
record of environmental destruction in Sarawak continues in Tasmania, with its
disregard for this islands old growth forests and wildlife. Ta Ann has
tried to portray itself as producing ‘eco-products’ in an attempt to mislead
customers as to the origin of their wood and to cover up its disgraceful role
in the logging of Tasmania’s ancient forests” [Jenny Weber, HVEC]
Lies!
Despite the evidence, the new report
documents how time and again Ta Ann has sought to give the impression that
the wood it is using in Tasmania is from plantations and re-growth
forests.
Sepawi was quoted in the local Tasmanian
paper, The Examiner, as describing their operations as “an innovative rotary
peeling process using plantation and regrowth logs”. It is a claim
that continues to be made in Ta Ann’s company website, describing
its ’Environmental Management’ and ‘Eco-Wood’.
Boasts that bear no relation to reality! |
Environmentalist critics say that none of these
claims are true and that certain politicians and forestry supporters have been
so keen to get Ta Ann into the State that they have been giving away valuable
timber for a loss. Green MP Paul O’Halloran explained to Sarawak Report
that currently plantation wood is about twice as expensive as the ancient
forest wood, because it has to be farmed as a business, whereas natural
wood comes ‘free’.
He believes this is the reason why Ta Ann has been
demanding wood from old growth forests rather than the plantation forests it
pledged to use when it entered Tasmania in 2006:
Too big for the peeler – this ancient eucalyptus tree is ear-marked for clear felling by Ta Ann. But it will end up as wood chip! |
“They are
getting the old growth forest for less than give away prices. We are
giving it away and getting a loss, so of course it is cheaper than plantation
wood”.
“Plantation wood has a higher value because it is a
more consistent product and is easier to process. This means there is
more demand for it and so it is more expensive. Also, consumers prefer it as
more environmentally friendly and are insisting on it”
“It is purely a question of economics. the
old-growth forest is 50% cheaper – that is why they [Ta Ann] prefer it”.
In response the Director of Ta Ann Tasmania, David
Ridley, contacted Sarawak Report to deny the company uses old growth
wood, because the giant ancient trees are too large for their machines:
“Briefly – we can’t use old growth billets due to
the size and quality. We can and do use pruned plantation billets of
suitable quality and have trialled unpruned but it is not suitable. You
will have seen yesterday that the billets are young growth”
Mr Ridley offered to come back with more details,
but so far has not. Investigation by Sarawak Report of the
areas that Ta Ann are logging shows that they are clear felling old forests and
destroying ancient trees in order to get to the smaller ‘young growth’ trees
amongst them. Ta Anns ‘young growth billets’ are trees that are up
to a hundred years old and which have been taken by destroying old growth
forests.
Taib
family business that is acting true to form
The information revealed by the report shows that Ta
Ann’s solution has been to say one thing, but do another thing in order to
exploit the lucrative Japanese market for ‘eco-wood’. 90% of Ta Ann’s
exports from Tasmania end up in Japan, where they are being marketed as
certified ‘environmentally friendly’ products, especially flooring.
Plain incentive – Ta Ann’s 2010 Annual Report shows a keen awareness that the Japanese market is all about ‘eco-friendly’ materials |
Ta
Ann are publicly implying that their wood is eco-friendly, while
raping the forests because it is cheaper to do so! Indeed, no one
has ever accused a Taib family company of putting the environment or
honesty before profit in Malaysia, so why expect them to act
differently in Australia?
The
reality
Although Ta Ann Tasmania have claimed they are using
‘eco-wood’, the report shows that they have in fact exclusively demanded
old growth wood from the state’s Forestry Commission.
In a submission to the Standing Committee of the
Australian Federal Government earlier this year Ta Ann Tasmania admitted that:
”plantations
are yet to be proven as a viable substitute for regrowth from native forests
for either mill”.
By regrowth they mean young trees in old
forests. And to get these trees Ta Ann has been clear cutting the
entire forest and then burning what remains.
The
Japanese Ads
So this arrives us at the
question, who is to blame for the spate of Japanese advertisements that
the report reveals have clearly mislead well-intentioned consumers who want to
purchase ‘eco-friendly’ wood?
The report “Behind the Veneer: Forest Destruction and Ta
Ann Tasmania’s lies” lists numerous ads in Japan for
Tasmanian sourced Ta Ann wood flooring and other products that are
supposedly eco-friendly.
EIDAI Ad – this key Japanese retailer is one of 5 companies selling Ta Ann Tasmania’s wood under the banner of eco-wood. How did they arrive at such a conclusion? |
As we now know, these claims are simply untrue.
It is not ‘eco-friendly’ to tear down old growth, ancient eucalypt forests,
while at the same time giving the impression that you are only using plantation
wood.
Driving
the destruction of the forests Australia is TRYING to preserve
All to benefit Ta Ann – so far there has been no profit for Tasmania from the felling of their wild forests by Ta Ann, because the wood has been sold below market value and without profit! |
The most pernicious part of this whole story has to
be its latest chapter. The Federal Australian Government has been doing
its best to buy out the fag end of the Tasmanian logging industry from its
business, before one of the world’s last great wildernesses is lost.
An agreement between the Federal and State
Governments has therefore just been concluded whereby Tasmania’s remaining
logging firms will receive major compensation, in return for putting aside
another 430,000 hectares of forest for conservation.
The inter-governmental deal includes an agreement
that until the final settlement is in place there will be NO logging
in the identified areas. However, Tasmania’s State Forestry
Department has been ignoring this inter-governmental agreement, in favour
of contracts agreed with Ta Ann!
It turns out that Ta Ann has secured guaranteed wood
supplies from the State owned logger, Forestry Tasmania until 2027
and is lobbying to extend it further till 2047 (why stop until the cheap
trees are gone?). So, Forestry Tasmania has been continuing to
log these areas, even though the public think they have been protected.
Indeed Tasmania’s forestry authorities have given
notice they intend to log in no less than 87 coupes in wild forest areas
supposedly protected under the recent law. Of these 59 are justified as
part of the contracts agreed with Ta Ann.
“Logging for
Ta Ann is also breeching the current Intergovernmental Agreement between the
Australian and Tasmanian governments which has demanded logging be stopped in 430,000
hectares of high conservation value forests. Ta Ann’s operations here in
Tasmania are far from eco-friendly and must rank amongst the worst logging
practices globally,”[Jenny Webber HVEC]
Japanese companies who are marketing Ta Ann products
from Tasmania should now take notice. Because if this is ‘eco-wood’, then
consumers should be made aware. In fact it would be hard to find
a situation that is less sustainable and less environmentally
friendly than the clear fell destruction being waged by Ta Ann in
Tasmania.
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