Sign on to letter to Forest Stewardship Council
Support local communities struggling against tree plantations by signing onto open letter to FSC members. (23 Oct 2008) World Rainforest Movement
23 October 2008
Dear friends,
In spite of all the documented evidence regarding the
destructive nature of tree monocultures, the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC)
has continued to certify them as properly managed “forests”. Given that the FSC
will be holding its general assembly from 3-7 November in South Africa, a number
of organizations from countries impacted by FSC-certified plantations have
decided to disseminate an open letter to FSC members and to gather as many
endorsements as possible. If you wish to support local communities struggling
against tree plantations, please sign-on to the letter by sending a message to
support@wrm.org.uy including name, country and organization until October
31st.
In support to the above, WRM has prepared a special
briefing on FSC certification of plantations, available here (pdf). For further information on
the destructive nature of plantations, you can visit our website.
Best wishes,
Ricardo Carrere
OPEN LETTER TO FSC
MEMBERS
The undersigned wish to urge members of the Forest
Stewardship Council (FSC) to urgently
resolve the serious problem of FSC certification of monoculture tree
plantations, at the FSC general assembly to be held in Cape Town, South
Africa.
One of the topics for discussion at the general assembly
is a Review of FSC Principles and Criteria, and there is therefore an
opportunity for changing those principles in such a way as to exclude the
certification of monoculture tree plantations by FSC.
FSC members –particularly from the environmental and
social chambers- must be made aware that certification of that type of
plantation is not only eroding the FSC’s credibility but –more importantly- that
it is undermining local people’s struggles against
plantations.
Those peoples are struggling to protect the same things
that FSC members from environmental and social organizations agreed needed to be
protected when they joined the FSC: indigenous, traditional and peasant
communities’ rights and livelihoods; forests, grasslands and wetlands; water,
soils and biodiversity.
All large scale tree plantations impact heavily on most
–and usually all- of the above. There is now more than sufficient documented
evidence of those impacts in a large number of countries, ranging from South
Africa and Swaziland to Brazil, Colombia, Chile, Ecuador, Uruguay, Spain,
Ireland and others.
The obvious conclusion must be that large scale tree
monocultures are uncertifiable.
In spite of that, time and time again FSC-accredited
certifiers have awarded the FSC seal to them. Little has mattered that those
plantations were being opposed by local communities and that the FSC label would
result in further strengthening already very powerful companies whose activities
are destroying Nature and peoples’ livelihoods.
Four years after having launched the FSC Plantations
Review, nothing has changed. In spite of
abundant documentation demonstrating the negative social and
environmental impacts of plantations, there are currently at least 8.5 million
hectares of plantations already certified, as well as an unknown area within the
37.7 million hectares grouped under the category “semi-natural & mixed
plantation and natural forest”, which hides a large number of
plantations.
The time has now arrived for FSC members –particularly
from the social and environmental chambers- to take sides: to continue to allow
business as usual, or to fight for change; to protect the interests of large
pulp and timber corporations or the rights of local peoples and Nature; to carry
on accepting that plantations are a “type of forest” or to agree that they have
nothing in common with them; to greenwash a most harmful land-use, or to oppose
social and environmental destruction.
We therefore call on those FSC members who share with us
the desire to protect local peoples and Nature from the damage caused by the
expansion of tree plantations to raise their voices at the upcoming general
assembly and to help bring about the change that is
needed.
Centro de Estudos e Pesquisas para o Desenvolvimento -
CEPEDES Brazil
Federação de Órgãos para Assistência Social e Educacional
- FASE Brazil
CENSAT-Friends of the Earth
Colombia
COECOCEIBA Friends of the Earth Costa
Rica
Observatorio Latinoamericano de Conflictos Ambientales -
OLCA Chile
Acción Ecológica Ecuador
Asociación pola Defensa da Ria - APDR
Spain
Asociación para a Defensa Ecolóxica de Galicia -ADEGA
Spain
Federación Ecoloxista Galega - FEG
Spain
Grupo Guayubira Uruguay
Pesticides Action Network PAN
Uruguay
REDES - Friends of the Earth
Uruguay
Timberwatch Coalition South
Africa
World Rainforest Movement
Source: World Rainforest Movement