Verified Legal? Ramifications of the EU Timber Regulation and Indonesia's Voluntary Partnership Agreement for the Legality of Indonesian Timber

Author: Fishman A.   Obidzinski K.  

Publisher: Commonwealth Forestry Association

E-ISSN: 2053-7778|17|1|10-19

ISSN: 1465-5489

Source: International Forestry Review, Vol.17, Iss.1, 2015-03, pp. : 10-19

Disclaimer: Any content in publications that violate the sovereignty, the constitution or regulations of the PRC is not accepted or approved by CNPIEC.

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Abstract

The EU Timber Regulation bans illegal timber in Europe and requires due diligence on imported wood. Given the recent ratification of the EU-Indonesia Voluntary Partnership Agreement (VPA), the Timber Regulation raises questions about the role that Indonesia's timber legality certification scheme—the SVLK—plays in securing access for Indonesian timber to the European market. Certified timber automatically qualifies for export to Europe under the VPA, but the SVLK has weaknesses which the VPA may be unable to address. The Timber Regulation might have helped, but it explicitly excludes VPA timber from its due diligence requirements. Critically, though, it continues to apply to Indonesian timber entering the EU via third countries. Whether it can address the SVLK's shortcomings as regards this timber depends on: (1) whether the SVLK meets the Regulation's certification scheme reliability criteria; and (2) whether the EUTR considers certification sufficient proof of legality to satisfy due diligence requirements.