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Explore how John May, Director of Latham Ltd, ensures that his company meets EU market requirements, including sustainability and timber procurement policies, to cater to major customers and suppliers in the industry.
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Meeting EU Market Requirements John May Director Latham Ltd
Hardwood £33m Wood based panels £89m Flooring £4m Softwood £4m Turnover £130 million
Impetusfor Sustainability • NGOs
Impetusfor Sustainability • NGOs • Government
UK Government Timber Procurement Policy • Contract requirement – legally logged and traded and sustainably produced timber products or • FLEGT licenced timber • Legal – right to use forest, met national laws and paid tax • Sustainable – forest management plan to ISO/IEC Guide 59 code of good practice • Proof – 3rd party certification and Chain of Custody
Central Point of Expertise in Timber (CPET) determines what meets the UK Government requirements Category A – FSC/PEFC Category B – Other acceptable evidence EU Timber Regulation – already covered by Rachel Butler
Impetusfor Sustainability • NGOs • Government • Major customers • Suppliers to concerned retailers • Merchants
James Latham’s response to environmental concerns • FSC/PEFC material offered across product range • Chain of custody for FSC and PEFC • Target improved sales certified sustainable/legal material • Sign up to TTF Responsible Purchasing Policy
Responsible Purchasing Policy • Company commitments • Communicated to staff and suppliers • Survey suppliers • Assess suppliers – high/medium/low • Measure volume by category • Target Lathams for improving supplier profile • Seek improvements from suppliers • Seek other suppliers • Process subject to external audit
Certification – adding value or cost? • Clearly adds cost but premium available on tropical material • Requirement to promote timber as the only sustainable building material • Taking cheap illegal material out of supply chain increases price levels. • Other species and value added products