nice article from the Globe & Mail Sat. Aug 12th. It does not mention AQCI but I think it tells us, we are where the future is going!
Good wood While tropical hardwoods have become a hot décor item, they also remain a hot-button issue for environmentalists. As more and more consumers try to do the right thing, retailers are taking action.
KAREN BURSHTEIN Special to The Globe and Mail Saturday, August 12, 2000
Your back yard is looking lush. You've invited your friends for a barbecue on your new tumbled-stone patio. But instead of leaning back to enjoy the view, they want to know where the teak in your loungers came from. And hey, what about the wooden tray on the grill?
A rainforest, right? Not exactly. If your tropical-hardwood furniture is made of "ethical" wood, it was likely grown on a plantation, or a secondary forest certified by a watchdog like the international Forest Stewardship Council.
"Good wood" is the new buzz term in furniture. And it isn't just for eco-activists any more: Home décor retailers such as Ikea and Restoration Hardware are jumping on the good-wood bandwagon, along with hardware giants such as Home Depot. It's a trend, industry insiders say, driven by consumers.
"We found that more and more, our customers were asking for certified furniture," said Laurence Martoque, a spokeswoman for Ikea Canada, whose parent company plans to phase out all products made from wood of unknown origin by next month. "Wood is a good resource to use when used responsibly. But only when used in a sustainable, proper manner. We don't purchase remotely. We know the suppliers we work with."
The Swedish-based chain is following in the footsteps of Home Depot, which pledged last year to stop buying wood products from "environmentally sensitive areas" by the end of 2002. And just this week, Home Depot's main U.S. competitor, Lowe's Cos., announced it would immediately end purchases of lumber from endangered forests, including the Great Bear Rainforest on the B.C. coast, a move denounced by the Canadian forest industry.
For some, this eco-awareness is happening none too soon, given the renewed consumer hunger for wood.
"Wood is in," said Meg Crossley, design editor at Canadian House and Home magazine. "Lamp bases, vases, storage units are all wood. Whole walls are wood, which we haven't seen since the Sixties, and if the wood has a hint of the exotic, it's even more appealing."
The debate over wood, which has long been simmering in rainforests around the world, has heated up in recent months. In May, Nature magazine reported that Caribbean and Pacific mahoganies are all but extinct, despite the "mahogany is murder" boycott of the 1990s. Illegal logging in Cambodia runs rampant, especially since neighbouring Thailand banned hardwood logging in 1989. Burmese teak, frequently smuggled out of Myanmar, and satinwood are also on the brink of extinction, according to CITES, the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species. And just last month, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., lawyer for the Washington, D.C.-based National Resource Defense Council, flew into Canada to publicize the fight over Great Bear.
"Canadians are saying boo hoo about decimation of the Brazilian and other tropical rainforests," said Christoph Thies, a spokesman for Greenpeace, a partner in Ikea's good-wood program. "But too few realize that the B.C rainforest, the last temperate rainforest on the planet, is just about extinct."
Thies says Ikea is sending an important message out to consumers -- and to its competitors. "People who buy wood have a right, actually an obligation, to know where the wood comes from, to know that they are doing their part in preventing ancient forest destruction."
The need for awareness is echoed by Peterborough, Ont.-based furniture designer Michael Fortune, a 1993 winner of the Saidye Bronfman award for craft. "It is important to have information available to furniture designers and architects," Fortune said, "so that office towers and interiors do not go up that consume huge amounts of enviromentally fragile wood, only to be redecorated in five years."
Fortune has put his principles into action, helping set up a program in Trinidad and Tobago that builds outdoor furniture for export out of teak and a mahogany-like wood from plantations. He worked on a similar program in Mexico, aimed at promoting a sustainable timber industry, and is setting up a woodworking shop in B.C.'s Queen Charlotte Islands.
But even motivated consumers have trouble sorting out the issues. Conservation groups have become as thick as the trees in a rainforest, and many disagree on basic issues such as whether it is ever acceptable to cut down old-growth trees.
Most would find plantation wood acceptable, however, which is why you will see the words "plantation-grown teak" in the catalogue of retro-chic emporium Restoration Hardware. Toronto's Craig Osborne, part-owner of Tribal Trade, purveyor of sleek teak chaises and other tropical-wood furniture, also offers plantation teak, grown in Indonesia and monitored by a group called Forests Forever. "The Indonesian government has actively been monitoring their teak-forest plantations for 50 years," Osborne said.
Promoting the use of responsibly "managed" wood is a more pragmatic approach than chaining yourself to railroad tracks, as environmentalists did in Switzerland this spring to halt a shipment of African wood. And boycotts, while they get attention, can be risky. "Boycotts are unpredictable," said Norman Bezona, professor emeritus at the University of Hawaii College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources. Rather than saving endangered trees, he said, a boycott can lead to them being cut down in order to grow species that are seen as more consumer-friendly.
While eco-consciousness is on the rise, Canadian consumers are a long way from being as demanding as Europeans. Syd Barkhouse, an engineer at the Fiesta Barbecue company in Mississauga, Ont., said his company uses Forest Stewardship Council-certified wood for the shelves and handles of grills destined for overseas. But the company gets few requests for certified wood components from North Americans. "The European market is more evolved in terms of that," he said.
The awareness lag is partly why there are still only a handful of FSC-certified forests in Canada. The certification process can be lengthy, requiring adherence to a 10-point program, which includes avoiding old-growth cutting and obtaining the informed consent of indigenous groups to log. Chain-of-custody rules mean FSC wood can't even be stored with other wood.
Such restrictions, which have raised the ire of traditional lumber suppliers, also raise costs, whether the wood is being harvested in North America or Thailand. That means smaller retailers and manufacturers who lack the clout of an Ikea have to simply trust their suppliers.
"A lot of our customers ask us the provenance of the wood," said Gary Grossman, owner of Biltmore, which has furniture boutiques in Montreal and Toronto. "We've been told that it is plantation teak.
"I've been to Indonesia and you're shown a sample of the wood and you're told that's where it comes from. But it would be pretty well impossible to know where the tree was really cut down."
Terry Iwaskiw, owner of Upcountry in Toronto, echoes that sentiment. "I know a lot of people who are essentially buying wood off the back of trucks, high-end manufacturers buying from any source they can get," he said.
"I would like to think we're being responsible, but in the end we rely on the integrity of our source."
WOOD WORDS
The issues involved in sustainable wood management are labyrinthine and fraught with politics, but an hour or two on the Internet will provide fodder for thought. Some sites are listed below. certifiedwood.org: The Certified Forest Products Council gives detailed information on wood species, certified wood products and sources. fscoax.org: The Mexico-based Forest Stewardship Council site provides a list of FSC certified forests, including several in Canada. It also outlines what consumers and suppliers can do to ensure they are buying good wood. greenpeace.org: The environmental organization's site provides an introduction to secondary-forest growth.
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