Papua New Guinea log exports to China surge
R. Butler, mongabay.com
December 19, 2006



Papua New Guinea (PNG) log exports surged in October according to the International Tropical Timber Organization's (ITTO) Tropical Timber Market Report.




Officially, PNG's log exports soared to 270,161 cubic meters in October 2006, up 31 percent from September and 21 percent from October. 82 percent of the exports went to China, followed by Japan (8 percent), Vietnam (3.4 percent) and Korea (3.4 percent).

ITTO said that total log exports from natural forests amounted to 2.53 million cubic meters in the period from November 2005 to October 2006.

The ITTO numbers represent only official figures. Environmental groups say that much of the logging that occurs in PNG is illegal, a claim that is disputed by the government.

China is by far the world's largest importer of tropical logs according to the ITTO.

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Rainforest conservation could yield more cash than logging in PNG. Papua New Guinea (PNG) could earn hundreds of millions of dollars for cutting its rainforest destruction if a carbon carbon-trading initiative it proposed last year makes headway this week at U.N. climate talks in Nairobi, Kenya.

China's Olympics may destroy New Guinea's rainforests. Construction for the 2008 Olympics in China may fuel deforestation in New Guinea according to an article published last week in the Jakarta Post.

Home Depot, Lowe's selling illegal wood from Papua New Guinea-Report. Consumers in the United States are being mislead as to the origin of merbau hardwood flooring being sold by Home Depot and Lowe's. According to a new report published by the Environmental Investigation Agency and their Indonesian NGO partner Telepak, such timber is coming from the forests of Indonesia's remote Papua Province, where 80 percent of logging is estimated to be illegal.





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