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Timber for Haiti

Timber for Haiti. Minimize the negative and maximize the positive. Avoid illegal and unwanted sources Maximize recycled/reclaimed and credibly certified sources. Rebuilding without doing NO MORE HARM. Do no more harm.

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Timber for Haiti

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  1. Timber for Haiti • Minimize the negative and maximize the positive. • Avoid illegal and unwanted sources • Maximize recycled/reclaimed and credibly certified sources Rebuilding without doing NO MORE HARM

  2. Do no more harm • Use responsibly sourced or recycled materials where possible and rebuild local industries • Avoid exacerbating existing pressure on local natural resources (eg avoid timber supply from stressed forest systems – especially important considering historical deforestation in Haiti) • Involve local processing industries (sawmills) in customizing, treatment and distribution of materials • Avoid creating new or expanding existing processing industries beyond the long-term capacity for the relevant natural resource to supply them

  3. What do I ask? • Is the source legal? • How did it get here? • Supply chain traceability? • Supply chain complexity? • What is the environmental status? • Certified/recycled • In-progress to certification • Known licensed • Known • Unwanted • Unknown

  4. Risk Management • 3rd party audited? • High risk vs low risk? • Traceability • Country of origin • Species • Is the company in a “stepwise approach” program (GFTN, SmartStep, TFT)?

  5. Hierarchy of Responsible Timber Sourcing • FSC certified/recycled or reclaimed material • Licensed known source (3rd party certified) • Known source

  6. Maximize • Credibly certified • Forest source certified by independent 3rd party as being well-managed under a credible certification scheme • Verification: • -Valid forest management (FM) certificate • -Valid chain of custody (CoC) certificate • Progressing towards credible certification • A known licensed forest source participating in a time-bound process of progressing toward credible certification. • -GFTN participants, The Forest Trust, SmartWood’sSmartStep

  7. Known licensed and known • If FSC certified timber is unavailable, source from known licensed and known sources • Known licensed source • Basic legality check: • Supply chain mapped to known forest source • Legal right to harvest/charges and fees paid/timber legally traded • Independent 3rd party verification • Each stage has verified Chain of Custody controls • Known source • Traceable back to forest source • Low risk: district level • High risk: forest management unit (FMU)

  8. Eliminate • Unknown • Unwanted sources • Illegally harvested or traded wood • Conflict timber • Timber in violation of traditional/ civil rights • Conversion • Uncertified High Conservation Value Forests • GMOs

  9. Committing to responsible purchasing • Gain support and commitment from senior management within the program • Develop policies on souring • Communicate and train staff on policies • Establish a monitoring and traceability system • Implement • Review and improve

  10. Resources • GFTN Tools and Guides • http://gftn.panda.org/ • http://sourcing.gftn.panda.org • WWF – Timber for Aceh • http://www.wwf.org.au/articles/feature28/ • Chatham House • http://www.illegal-logging.info/ • CITES • http://www.cites.org/ • FSC • http://www.fsc.org • Rainforest Alliance • http://www.rainforest-alliance.orgT • Transparency International • http://transparency.org • TRAFFIC • http://www.traffic.org/timber-trade/

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