Brazil’s “Fake Legal Logging” Endangers the Rainforest

Published: 21 August 2018

deforestation

deforestation in Para by Vinícius Mendonça (CC BY 2.0)

By Aisha Down

Widespread fraud in Brazil’s timber industry has allowed businesses to illegally extract millions of dollars of timber from the country’s rainforest over the past several years, according to a paper published in Scientific Advances late last week.

The research undermines a stunning claim from Brazil’s Environment Ministry two weeks ago, which said the nation had met its 2020 greenhouse gas emissions reduction target two years early by massively cutting deforestation.

The fraud that the paper detected is linked to a strategy Brazil and other countries adopted over a decade ago to curb rampant forest degradation: giving private companies the right to manage forest concessions and to sustainably extract timber.

In Brazil, this strategy required officials to take detailed inventories of all the trees in a particular concession plot. These inventories were used to determine the number of each type of tree the company was permitted to log.

Examining 427 logging permits in Para, Brazil’s largest timber-production state, researchers found  “a strong overestimation...of high-value timber species volumes in logging permits.”

Or, in other words, officials issued logging permits that claimed that there were far more trees of certain expensive species in a concession than there actually were.

This allowed companies to extract more far timber than sustainable.

While the fraud is “subtle,” its results are not, wrote the researchers: for a number of rare species such as ipe, whose dense red wood is now sold in Europe and America for decking, this practice could lead to extinction.