LONDON: Myanmar’s precious rosewood tree species are heading for imminent commercial extinction
at the hands of China’s multi-billion dollar rosewood furniture boom.
The
illegal trade in rosewood species is driven by the expanding wealthy
elites in China and their desire for the high-end Ming and Qing dynasty
reproduction furniture collectively
known as ‘hongmu’.
In the briefing
Myanmar’s Rosewood Crisis
released today, the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) reveals
that if current trends persist unaddressed, the two most targeted
hongmu species in Myanmar - tamalan and padauk - could be logged to
commercial extinction within as little as three years.
The briefing follows EIA’s May report
Routes of Extinction, which documented how the frenzied pressure
on Siamese rosewood has all but eradicated the species from countries
neighbouring Myanmar, leaving Thailand facing violence and conflict
within its forests.
Virtually overnight, Myanmar has become the biggest hongmu log supplier to China worldwide.
“If
Myanmar doesn’t seek help, now, then these precious species will quite
simply become extinct very soon,” warned EIA Forests Campaign Leader
Faith Doherty.
“The
vast bulk of this stolen timber is smuggled into China across its land
border with Myanmar and, although Myanmar has a log export ban in place,
China simply isn’t respecting
its neighbour’s laws and allows these rosewoods to flow in unhindered.
“China
has little regard for forestry or timber trade laws in foreign
countries but does show some respect for the Convention on International
Trade in Endangered Species
(CITES), and we believe the best short-term action Myanmar can take, as
a matter of urgency, is to secure listing for its threatened rosewood
species via CITES.”
EIA
contends that the huge scale of illegal and unsustainable logging poses a
real threat to governance, the rule of law and the viability of
dwindling forests.
China’s
2013 imports of Myanmar’s rosewood logs were triple the volume and
value recorded in 2012, and nearly six times the 2010 trade.
Seizures of illegal rosewood in Myanmar since 2008 have followed almost exactly the same pattern as imports into China.
The briefing urges the Government of Myanmar to seek CITES Appendix III protection for its at-risk hongmu species –
Dalbergia bariensis / oliveri (tamalan) and Pterocarpus macrocarpus (padauk) - at the soonest opportunity to ensure trade is in line with sustainable exploitation of existing standing stocks.
“Myanmar
needs help and CITES is one way for the Government to seek assistance
in protecting this valuable resource. EIA is also calling for CITES
Parties to assist Myanmar
in its need for a fully functioning Management Authority,” added
Doherty.
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