How effective is the EU’s marquee policy to reduce the illegal timber trade?

Use the drop-down menus to select data from your country of choice or to view data for a particular type of evidence. Click on the name of an outcome (such as forest conditions or accountability) to display only data specific to it. Click on a square to see what evidence the outcome is based on. You can find this and other infographics on different conservation interventions in our Conservation Effectiveness series at ConservationEffectiveness.org. Data visualization by GreenInfo Network

The environmental verdict: Inconclusive due to insufficient evidence

Surprisingly, very little research appears to have looked into what results FLEGT VPAs have delivered on the overarching goal of conserving and protecting the ecological well-being of forests. After all, even when timber is harvested legally, that doesn’t necessarily mean it was harvested sustainably. Yet, “Only two articles included this effect category,” the researchers write.

A 2019 study in International Forestry Review found that, in Indonesia, the VPA process has yielded progress in creating the right conditions for sustainable forest management, mainly through forest law enforcement, improved forest governance, and increased transparency. A 2020 study in the same journal found that Indonesia’s timber legality assurance system (or TLAS), known domestically as SVLK-FM, has also enhanced sustainable forest management practices.

Even these two lone studies present what the review’s authors call “vague results” on the environmental benefits of FLEGT VPAs, however, and they note that “future research is required to obtain concrete conclusions.”

The social and governance verdict: Mostly positive or no effect, some red flags

Decidedly more research has investigated the social impacts of FLEGT VPAs, but the results are still largely inconclusive.

For instance, the means by which FLEGT VPAs aim to ensure healthy forests is by stopping illegal logging, of course, and the review found that VPAs led to the successful implementation and strengthening of law enforcement mechanisms, though “forest law compliance has remained limited.” The review’s authors add that only three studies examined the effects of VPAs on illegal logging: The 2020 International Forestry Review study noted that Indonesia’s timber legality assurance system, SVLK-FM, has “added value in eradicating illegal logging,” while a 2021 study in Forest Policy and Economics found that the VPA process in Cameroon, Ghana and Indonesia has contributed to a decrease in illegal logging rates. On the other hand, a 2016 study in the same journal determined that Indonesia’s SVLK-FM appeared to be “ineffective” and had not helped combat illegal timber production in community forests in Java. Describing these results as “diverse and disparate,” Polo-Villanueva and his co-authors assert that “there is a surprising information gap on the effects of VPAs on illegal logging.”

As for how FLEGT VPAs are impacting the amount of illegal timber traded internationally, just one study, the one published in Forest Policy and Economics in 2021, looked at the question. Polo-Villanueva and co-authors quote that 2021 study’s finding of a “clear positive effect on [reducing] illegal industrial timber placed on the export market,” but they note that “more scientific evidence is required to draw concrete conclusions.”

Similarly, Polo-Villanueva and his co-authors found that VPAs have had “mixed effects” on enabling participation by various stakeholder groups in decision-making, and so “have not succeeded in involving all stakeholders or their contributions in the forest policy decision-making processes.” And while the literature showed that VPAs have led to improved disclosure of information, they “have not entirely ensured that the information is understood and used by all stakeholders,” the authors write.

Of the eight studies that examined how VPAs affect the development of accountability mechanisms, four found a positive effect. But the researchers note that studies on Indonesia, the only country that has reached the stage in the VPA process where it is actually issuing FLEGT licenses, found that these mechanisms aren’t being applied equally. “VPAs have contributed to the establishment of processes and accountability mechanisms,” Polo-Villanueva and his co-authors write, “but have not succeeded in holding all actors in the supply chain accountable for their actions because some actors have developed various strategies to circumvent legality requirements.”

The researchers found limited evidence for the effects of FLEGT VPAs on the effectiveness of governmental forest-sector organizations, so were unable to draw any substantial conclusions on this topic.

When it comes to access to forests and tenure rights as well as local livelihoods, Polo-Villanueva and team found evidence that VPAs can have negative effects. Five studies looked at impacts on rights of access and forest tenure and generally found that “VPAs have contributed towards the weakening of local access to forest resource use by prioritising international actors,” Polo-Villanueva and his co-authors write. Meanwhile, some research has reported negative impacts on the livelihoods of local communities despite safeguards included in VPAs such as social responsibility agreements. A 2017 study in Society & Natural Resources, for instance, determined that in Indonesia, “despite some state subsidies, economies of scale have put smallholders, as well as small-scale enterprises [processors and traders], at a disadvantage in achieving certification.”

Timber awaiting export at Port Buchanan, Liberia.
Timber awaiting export at Port Buchanan, Liberia, in 2012. Image by Preneuf/PROFOR via Flickr (CC BY-NC 2.0).
A wood truck in Cameroon.
A wood truck in Cameroon. Image by Ollivier Girard/CIFOR via Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0).

The economic verdict: Negative effects

One goal of the VPAs is to develop international markets for legally produced timber. However, the researchers write that a few studies concluded that “VPAs have increased operational costs of exporting companies through legality efforts and their need to adopt both mandatory (FLEGT) and voluntary … certification to meet market demands.” They also note that the literature shows that “VPAs have contributed to a decrease in the volume of timber exported from partner countries to the EU” because of the stricter requirements. Exporting companies now tend to sell to “other markets with less restrictive measures,” while EU-based importers have turned to non-VPA partner countries.

As for effects on domestic markets, a few studies concluded that VPAs have “hindered” the access of local forestry enterprises and smallholders in Indonesia, mainly through the added costs of legality verification and certification mechanisms and the absence of any direct economic benefits. The same 2021 study was the only one that looked at VPAs’ effects on the volume of illegal timber entering domestic markets. It focused on Cameroon, Ghana and Indonesia, and states that “the VPA process has only marginally contributed to reducing the share of illegal timber placed on the domestic market.” Polo-Villanueva and team note once again that more research is needed.

The main takeaway from these findings is clearly that more research is needed to determine how effective the FLEGT Action Plan has been at delivering on all of its intended environmental, social and economic outcomes. It’s especially crucial that we have a better understanding of how well FLEGT is delivering on the core objective of stopping illegal logging and the trade in illicitly harvested timber in order to preserve the ecological integrity of the world’s most important forests.

“The scientific literature doesn’t have this kind of evidence so far, so apparently there has not been a peer-reviewed process on this,” Polo-Villanueva said. “This is a huge gap.”

The evidence suggests that VPAs have helped promote necessary governance reform processes, but have so far not proven effective at helping to solve broader social issues such as unequal access to forests for local and Indigenous communities. So it’s perhaps equally important that the ability of FLEGT VPAs to deliver on social and economic outcomes are more heavily scrutinized as well. For FLEGT to be a truly sustainable solution, its benefits must be shared by all.

Banner image: Moving timber in Cameroon. Image by Ollivier Girard/CIFOR via Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0).


Writer: Mike Gaworecki
Editors: Rebecca Kessler, Zuzana Burivalova
Copyeditor: Hayat Indriyatno
Infographic: Zuzana Burivalova, GreenInfo Network
Infographic researchers: Fredy David Polo-Villanueva and Paolo Cerutti


Citations:

Polo-Villanueva, F. D., Tegegne, Y. T., Winkel, G., Cerutti, P. O., Ramcilovic-Suominen, S., McDermott, C. L., … Giessen, L. (2023). Effects of EU illegal logging policy on timber-supplying countries: A systematic review. Journal of Environmental Management, 327, 116874. doi:10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.116874

Brusselaers, J., & Buysse, J. (2018). Implementation of the EU-Cameroon Voluntary Partnership Agreement policy: Trade distortion, rent-seeking and anticipative behavior. Forest Policy and Economics, 90, 167-179. doi:10.1016/j.forpol.2018.02.008

Neupane, P. R., Wiati, C. B., Angi, E. M., Köhl, M., Butarbutar, T., Reonaldus, & Gauli, A. (2019). How REDD+ and FLEGT-VPA processes are contributing towards SFM in Indonesia – the specialists’ viewpoint. International Forestry Review, 21(4), 460-485. doi:10.1505/146554819827906807

Astana, S., Riva, W. F., Hardiyanto, G., Komarudin, H., & Sukanda, A. (2020). Towards improved forestry performance: Evaluating the added value of the timber legality assurance system in Indonesia. International Forestry Review, 22(1), 19-32. doi:10.1505/146554820828671517

Cerutti, P. O., Goetghebuer, T., Leszczynska, N., Dermawan, A., Newbery, J., Tabi Eckebil, P. P., & Tsanga, R. (2021). Voluntary partnership agreements: Assessing impacts for better policy decisions. Forest Policy and Economics, 124, 102386. doi: 10.1016/j.forpol.2020.102386

Nurrochmat, D. R., Dharmawan, A. H., Obidzinski, K., Dermawan, A., & Erbaugh, J. T. (2016). Contesting national and international forest regimes: Case of timber legality certification for community forests in Central Java, Indonesia. Forest Policy and Economics, 68, 54-64. doi:10.1016/j.forpol.2014.09.008

Setyowati, A., & McDermott, C. L. (2017). Commodifying legality? Who and what counts as legal in the Indonesian wood trade. Society & Natural Resources, 30(6), 750-764. doi:10.1080/08941920.2016.1239295

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