China introduces logging bans
11 June 2015
Zhang
Jianlong, deputy director of the State Forestry Administration of
China, said a logging ban has already been put in place in some key
areas, especially in the country’s three northeastern provinces, on
trial basis this year. Source: Caixin Online
The prohibition will be extended to all state-owned forests next year and logging on privately owned land will be stopped by the end of 2017 he said.
The bans will cut timber output by 50 million cubic meters per year – the equivalent of 30% of logs, Mr Zhang said.
China has about 200 million hectares of old-growth forest. Some 127 million hectares of that are protected under a central government conservation program that started in 1998, but conservationists say the remainder is being depleted of trees by reckless logging.
The bans are aimed at the forests that conservationists say are under threat.
Mr Zhang said China produces 70% to 80% of the world’s wood furniture and half of its wood products, including particleboard and fiberboard, but this cannot continue.
“Our ecosystem has become so bad that it is no longer sustainable for China to continue serving as a world factory for wood products,” he said.
To offset the shortfall in timber production – and perhaps even increase it – the forestry administration will plant 14.7 million hectare of trees over the next few years, mostly in the south.
It hopes that this planting yields 95 million cubic meters of timber per year within the next five to eight years.
The country will also continue to rely on imports, Mr Zhang said.
By 2020, imports will account for more than 40% of China’s timber consumption.
China is the world’s biggest importer of timber imports and is second in consumption, using about 500 million cubic meters a year. Its timber imports jumped from 4 million cubic meters per year before 1998 to the current level of 20 million cubic meters.
The prohibition will be extended to all state-owned forests next year and logging on privately owned land will be stopped by the end of 2017 he said.
The bans will cut timber output by 50 million cubic meters per year – the equivalent of 30% of logs, Mr Zhang said.
China has about 200 million hectares of old-growth forest. Some 127 million hectares of that are protected under a central government conservation program that started in 1998, but conservationists say the remainder is being depleted of trees by reckless logging.
The bans are aimed at the forests that conservationists say are under threat.
Mr Zhang said China produces 70% to 80% of the world’s wood furniture and half of its wood products, including particleboard and fiberboard, but this cannot continue.
“Our ecosystem has become so bad that it is no longer sustainable for China to continue serving as a world factory for wood products,” he said.
To offset the shortfall in timber production – and perhaps even increase it – the forestry administration will plant 14.7 million hectare of trees over the next few years, mostly in the south.
It hopes that this planting yields 95 million cubic meters of timber per year within the next five to eight years.
The country will also continue to rely on imports, Mr Zhang said.
By 2020, imports will account for more than 40% of China’s timber consumption.
China is the world’s biggest importer of timber imports and is second in consumption, using about 500 million cubic meters a year. Its timber imports jumped from 4 million cubic meters per year before 1998 to the current level of 20 million cubic meters.
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