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| Illegal loggers move a section of rosewood through a clearing in Oddar Meanchey’s Dangrek Mountains on the Thai-Cambodian border in 2014. Heng Chivoan |
New timber ban questioned
Phnom Penh Post | 29 November 2016
As of January, another of Cambodia’s highly traded varieties of
rosewood will be protected by an international convention as an
endangered species, but given past “dodgy trade”, observers are
skeptical of how meaningful that protection will be.
Demand from the Chinese market for Burmese rosewood soared in 2013
after one of its cousins – the much sought-after Siamese rosewood – was
added to Annex 2 of the UN Convention on the International Trade in
Endangered Species (CITES) and the Cambodian government outlawed all
harvest and trade in the precious hardwood.
Last month, at a meeting of its 183 member states in Johannesburg,
CITES elected to add Burmese rosewood to Annex 2. Listing a species
under Annex 2 means that all exports must first be certified by the
country of origin’s CITES management authority.
The management authority is required to assess – among other things –
whether the specimen was legally acquired and whether its harvest and
export would be detrimental to the country’s remaining stocks of its
species.
The Cambodian CITES management authority did not respond to repeated
requests for comment on the Burmese rosewood ban. However, Jago Wadley –
senior forest campaigner at London-based NGO Environmental
Investigation Agency (EIA) – said in emails this week that he did not
believe the Cambodian management authority was up to the task of
enforcing Burmese rosewood’s new listing when it comes into force in
January.
“We understand that Cambodia does not have inventory or population
data that would enable them to credibly judge on detrimentality,” Wadley
said. “It is our understanding therefore, that Cambodia is unlikely to
have legitimate grounds to issue any CITES export permits for the
species.”
Wadley’s concern comes in the wake of revelations earlier this year
that almost 2 million cubic metres of Siamese rosewood have been
exported to Vietnam from Cambodia since it was listed as protected in
2013. Attempting to explain these figures, the Cambodian and Vietnamese
management authorities have accused one another of corruptly issuing and
authorising CITES export and import permits.
“We anticipate a similar round of dodgy trade under CITES in [Burmese
rosewood] from January 2017 onwards,” Wadley said. “The species is a
look-alike replacement species for Siamese rosewood, and Cambodia is a
range state. Vietnam imports quite a lot from Laos and Cambodia and
other range states, usually for onward shipment to China.”
Vietnamese customs data provided by the NGO Forest Trends showed
almost $4.5 million of Burmese rosewood being imported from Cambodia in
the first nine months of this year, while imports of Siamese rosewood
were down to just $250,000.
Denis Smirnov, a consultant on the illegal timber trade, said
yesterday he believed the Vietnamese customs data were probably
representative of actual trade and that he shared EIA’s concerns.
“Credible data on populations or distribution of Burmese rosewood in
Cambodia and Laos is not available,” he said.
However, he added, “we can quite confidently suggest that resources
of luxury wood species in Cambodia are heavily degraded”, and there is
no reason to believe their export would not be “detrimental to the
survival of these rosewood species”.

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