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Partners in mahogany crime - Illegal-logging.info

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Executive summary<br />

paper protection<br />

for the Amazon<br />

©Greenpeace<br />

A recent satellite image reveals the location of an illegal log yard and<br />

logg<strong>in</strong>g road access<strong>in</strong>g Kayapó Indian lands<br />

Almost ten years ago, world leaders gathered <strong>in</strong> Rio de<br />

Janeiro, Brazil. The meet<strong>in</strong>g, known as the Earth Summit,<br />

became one of the def<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g moments of the fight to reverse<br />

the worldwide trend <strong>in</strong> environmental degradation. Together,<br />

more than 180 countries recognized the harm be<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>flicted<br />

on our fragile earth and vowed to put the world on a more<br />

susta<strong>in</strong>able path. Central to this was the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). This legally b<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>g<br />

agreement was <strong>in</strong>tended to provide a comprehensive framework for the protection of the world’s<br />

threatened natural habitats, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g ancient forests and the life that depends upon them.<br />

A decade later, the world’s ancient forests are still wait<strong>in</strong>g for governments to keep their Earth Summit<br />

promise. Today, some 80% of the world’s forests have been degraded or destroyed. The Amazon<br />

ra<strong>in</strong>forest is no exception. Last year deforestation of the Brazilian Amazon was greater than at any time<br />

s<strong>in</strong>ce 1995. 2<br />

Fuelled by high <strong>in</strong>ternational market demand, <strong>mahogany</strong> (Swietenia macrophylla) is driv<strong>in</strong>g<br />

the destruction of the ra<strong>in</strong>forests of the Brazilian Amazon.<br />

The vast majority of Brazil’s <strong>mahogany</strong> is exported. Luxury products from Brazilian <strong>mahogany</strong> are sold <strong>in</strong><br />

some of the most prestigious retail outlets <strong>in</strong> the world’s wealthiest countries. But the glamourous image<br />

hides a corrupt <strong>in</strong>dustry that is underm<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g traditional cultures, and lead<strong>in</strong>g the illegal destruction of the<br />

world’s most precious ancient forest, critical to the survival <strong>in</strong> the wild of creatures such as the jaguar.<br />

Often referred to as ‘green gold’, <strong>mahogany</strong> can fetch over US$1,600/m 3 . <strong>Illegal</strong> <strong>mahogany</strong> opens the door<br />

for illegal logg<strong>in</strong>g of other species, and for widespread exploitation of the Brazilian Amazon. The Brazilian<br />

Government’s assessment of the problem is that 80% of all Amazon timber orig<strong>in</strong>ates from illegal sources.<br />

At the core of illegal logg<strong>in</strong>g is widespread corruption.<br />

Despite many years of campaign<strong>in</strong>g by NGOs such as Greenpeace, the plethora of domestic and<br />

<strong>in</strong>ternational agreements, action programmes and laws pledg<strong>in</strong>g to protect the Amazon or control the<br />

<strong>mahogany</strong> trade have proved hopelessly <strong>in</strong>adequate. Over the last decade, numerous <strong>in</strong>ternational<br />

agreements have been signed to protect species such as <strong>mahogany</strong> and the rema<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>tact ancient<br />

forests <strong>in</strong> which <strong>mahogany</strong> occurs. These <strong>in</strong>clude the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), the Group<br />

of Eight (G8) Nations’ Action Programme on Forests and the Convention on International Trade <strong>in</strong><br />

Endangered Species (CITES). These agreements are not work<strong>in</strong>g.<br />

Recent Greenpeace <strong>in</strong>vestigations <strong>in</strong> the Brazilian state of Pará reveal just how deeply rooted the problem<br />

rema<strong>in</strong>s. No reliable legal cha<strong>in</strong> of custody exists for <strong>mahogany</strong>. <strong>Illegal</strong>ity is widespread. The key players<br />

are ruthless.<br />

This report sets out the evidence and names many of the key actors <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> the supply and trade of<br />

illegal <strong>mahogany</strong> from Brazil. Osmar Alves Ferreira and Moisés Carvalho Pereira are two k<strong>in</strong>gp<strong>in</strong>s <strong>in</strong> the<br />

state of Pará, which supplies the vast majority of Brazil’s <strong>mahogany</strong> trade. <strong>Illegal</strong> <strong>mahogany</strong> is laundered<br />

through fraudulent use of official documents. By the time it is shipped from the Amazon, the <strong>mahogany</strong><br />

appears legal and its illegal orig<strong>in</strong>s are untraceable.<br />

Ferreira and Moisés are connected to at least five export companies – Exportadora Peracchi/Serraria<br />

Cotia, Tapajos Timber, Semasa, Madeireira MCP and Juary/Jatoba – that together control around 80%<br />

of exports from the state of Pará. On the import<strong>in</strong>g side, just four companies <strong>in</strong> the North – Aljoma<br />

Lumber, DLH Nordisk, J Gibson McIlva<strong>in</strong> Co Ltd and Intercont<strong>in</strong>ental Hardwoods – account for over<br />

80% of the trade.<br />

1 <strong>Partners</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>mahogany</strong> <strong>crime</strong><br />

Amazon at the mercy of ‘gentlemen’s agreements’

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