
Illegal logging destroys biodiversity as well as causing climate change
Image by sebr

lumber truck in Honduras
Image by Vanessa Kurtz/ Progressio
The UK is the third largest importer of illegal timber in the world and we need your urgent help to put a stop to it.
Around £700 million of illegally-sourced timber comes into the UK each year. But now a Bill from Barry Gardiner MP is due for its Second Reading in Parliament on October 17. It would be a crucial step towards ending this destructive trade, making it illegal to distribute or sell illegally-sourced wood in the UK.
Despite rhetoric on illegal logging from the UK Government, they have not yet taken strong enough action.
Please support Barry Gardiner's Illegal Logging Bill by writing now to Hilary Benn, Secretary of State for Environment.
Not only are poor producer countries losing £7.5 billion a year because of illegal logging, we as consumers may unwittingly be buying wood that contributes to deforestation, climate change, loss of biodiversity and poverty in developing countries.

logging in Honduras
Image by Vanessa Kurtz/ Progressio
Corrupt public officials, the terrorising of poor communities and even the murder of community activist opponents of environmental degradation, are part of the wide-ranging criminality surrounding illegal logging in developing countries.
Progressio also wants you to urge the UK Government to take a stronger lead in Europe where imports of illegal timber amount to £2 billion each year, but where forestry legislation covering all 27 member states appears to have stalled.
It will be a positive step towards eliminating illegal logging.


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I'm glad that others are pushing on the international drivers to deforestation. The New Yorker just had a good story on illegal logging and its impacts. I did a post that built upon this story and discussed the connection between illegal logging and global warming pollution (see: http://switchboard.nrdc.org/blogs/jschmidt/illegal_blogging_and_climate_change.html). As I've noted the US took a major step recently in addressing the import of illegal wood and wood products. Will the EU and the UK follow?