For more than 25 years the Danish NGO, ADDA, has…
Project addresses timber trade
A European Union-funded project addressing the timber industry in Viet Nam and Laos was launched yesterday in Ha Noi by the Viet Nam Administration of Forestry (VnForest), The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and People and Nature Reconciliation (PanNature).
The four-year project, which includes forest-dependent communities, civil society groups, timber processing enterprises and government agencies, aims to help the countries comply with an EU regulation that took effect in March. Under the regulation, all timber products imported to the EU must be certified as legal.
Viet Nam currently imports approximately 40 per cent of raw materials for processing and export, speakers at the launch ceremony said. Control of imported timber, which ensures that legitimate timber is legally harvested under the laws of the exporting country, is a key element in the legal timber assurance system in Viet Nam.
There were currently millions of farmers planting material forests and more than 3,500 small and medium processing and exporting enterprises in Viet Nam, said Nguyen Ba Ngai, deputy director of the Viet Nam Administration of Forestry. To avoid complicated procedures of declaring timber origin for Vietnamese furniture exported to the EU, he urged Viet Nam’s Government to establish a credible and effective system for timber licensing, legality verification and monitoring.
“The project is especially important as Viet Nam and EU are in the final stage of VPA negotiations, which will finish by the end of this year,” he said.
In 2010, Viet Nam and the EU began negotiating a trade agreement with the goal of tackling obstacles to the production and export of timber products to the EU.