Stora Enso s approach to combat illegal logging Yokohama 3 December Pirjetta Soikkeli Communications Director Wood Supply, Sustainability

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Transcription:

Stora Enso s approach to combat illegal logging Yokohama 3 December 2007 Pirjetta Soikkeli Communications Director Wood Supply, Sustainability

Outline Stora Enso in brief Sustainable forestry Traceability Forest certification Conclusions 2

Stora Enso in brief

Stora Enso in brief A world leader 16.5 million tonnes of paper and board 7.7 million m3 of sawn and processed wood products Main Business Areas Newsprint Magazine Paper Fine Paper Consumer Boards Industrial Packaging Wood Products Approximately 44 000 employees in more than 40 countries Sales EUR 14.6 billion 4

Stora Enso Japan in brief The key supplier of paper, board and pulp to Japan and Taiwan Particularly serves consumer board markets Supplies of liquid packaging boards and food service boards Supplies of graphical, magazine and newsprint paper Annual net sales of EUR 120 Million 5

Stora Enso Timber Japan in brief Leading supplier to Japan, accounting for 27% of imported European timber Particularly serves the construction industry (post & beam houses, 2x4 houses, etc.) Supplies of European white wood and red wood sawn solid and kiln-dried further processed engineered wood products 1.03 Million m³ of timber delivered to Japan in 2006 Annual net sales EUR 270 million 1000 m3 6000 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 0 TTL SOFTWOOD IMPORTS European imports to Japan North America Russia Stora Enso Timber deliveries 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 6

Stora Enso operates in all main forest zones WS Sweden WS Finland WS Russia WS Baltic WS Continental Europe Laos China, Guangxi Stora Enso Forestry Wood Supply US Canada, Port Hawkesbury Brazil, Veracel (JV with Aracruz) Brazil, Arapoti Brazil, Rio Grande do Sul Uruguay, Rio Negro 7

Operations in the North 0.2 Canada Other countries Sweden 11.4 Continental Europe Finland 2.7 US 2.9 The Baltic Countries 0.1 7.1 13.0 7.1 Russia Stora Enso s wood flows (roundwood, chips and sawdust) Total amounts of wood procured within these areas and delivered to our own mills. In 2006, the total amount was 45.4 million m 3 (solid under bark). 8

Operations in the South Guangxi, China Planted area: 44 000 ha Main species: Eucalyptus Veracel, Brazil Planted area: 77 000 ha Main species: Eucalyptus Laos Trial plantations Planned main species: Eucalyptus, acacia Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil Planted area: 5 000 ha Planned main species: Eucalyptus Uruguay Planted area: 4 600 ha Planned main species: Pine 9

Sustainable forestry

Sustainability how we see it 1. A truly sustainable company has beneficial long-term impacts on society 2. Sustainability makes good business sense Customers like it Stakeholders demand it 3. Sustainability has many dimensions... Economic Social Environmental... all built on accountability. 11

Wood our most important raw material Wood is renewable and recyclable. About 80% of our fibre input is wood; about 20% is recycled paper / board. Paper cannot be recycled indefinitely fresh fibre will always be needed. Sustainable forestry is a must! 12

Our sustainable forestry principles Whenever trees are cut, new ones are planted no net CO 2 emissions into the atmosphere Only legal and acceptable wood sources 100% of traceability Promoting forest certification proportion of certified wood 55% in 2006 Responsible plantation management no conversion of rainforest to plantations 13

Traceability knowing every step

Knowing every step 100% traceability 15

All our wood comes from legal and acceptable sources Stora Enso uses traceability tools to document the origin of all wood and purchased pulp. Traceability tools: Stora Enso s own traceability systems Forest certification and chainof-custody systems These tools ensure the legality of loggings. Stora Enso does not accept illegal wood. 16

Legality of wood Stora Enso s position Illegal logging = Wood harvesting in violation of national laws and state laws We actively work to combat illegal logging wherever Stora Enso operates. We seek to prevent any other illegal activities related to wood supply. We co-operate with the authorities and other stakeholders in order to improve the working environment. 17

Stora Enso s Traceability System Traceability involves four main operational steps: A Contracts B Wood origin data registration and storage C Auditing D External audits 18

Environmental clauses in every contract Wood is procured and logged in accordance with local legislation and instructions. No wood is obtained from protected areas, areas planned for protection, or other areas covered by agreed restriction (unless purchases are in line with conservation regulations, goals and plans). Suppliers know and are able to verify the origin of all wood. Stora Enso has the right to audit suppliers, their logging areas, and the systems used for collecting and storing data on the origin of wood. 19

Collecting and registering wood origin data 20

Knowing every step 100% traceability Stora Enso s objective is that all fibre sources should be fully acceptable in terms of sustainability, and recognised as such by all stakeholders. The best way to do this is to ensure that the origin of the wood used by the Group is fully traced and documented. Traceability systems are also one of the most effective ways to combat illegal logging. 21

Forest certification

What is Forest Certification? Verifies that a forest has been managed in line with principles of sustainable forest management. Verification is conducted by an external certifier. Globally there are many different forest certification systems with slightly different requirements. Only 9% of the World s Forests are Certified 23

Relevant forest certification systems for Stora Enso FSC The Forest Stewardship Council PEFC The Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification Schemes Non-European systems endorsed by PEFC: SFI The Sustainable Forestry Initiative of the American Forest & Paper Association CSA Z809 The Canadian Standards Association's Programme for Sustainable Forest Management CERFLOR The Brazilian Forest Certification Program, Certificação Florestal Other non-european systems: ATFS The American Tree Farm System 24

Chain-of-custody KUVAT TÄYTYY EDITOIDA Forest Wood Mill Customers procurement PEFC FSC CoC CoC CoC 25

Stora Enso promotes forest certification wherever the Group operates The Group aims to increase the proportions of wood coming from certified forests. Due to local variations in conditions, Stora Enso sees a need for more than one forest certification system. The origin of all wood procured by Stora Enso is always known in any case regardless of whether it is certified or uncertified. 26

Certified and uncertified forest areas in European countries Russia Sweden Finland France Spain Germany Italy Ukraine Norway Poland Belarus Romania Austria Bulgaria Portugal Greece Latvia Czech Republic United Kingdom Estonia Slovakia Croatia Lithuania Hungary Switzerland Slovenia Belgium Ireland Denmark The Netherlands In some countries FSC and PEFC certificates may overlap. Thus, the total area of uncertified forests may be larger than shown in this chart. FSC FSC+PEFC PEFC Uncertified 0 5 10 15 20 25 Sources: PEFC, FSC March-April 2006 Million ha. 27

FSC and PEFC Examples of differences Founders FSC: environmental organisations, indigenous peoples organisations PEFC: forest-owners, industrial organisations Marketing FSC: environmental organisations, e.g. Greenpeace, WWF (The Global Forest and Trade Network) PEFC: private forest-owners organisations Coverage FSC: large forest holdings PEFC: small, private family forest holdings 28

Current challenges in forest certification Russia Amount of certified wood growing, but lacking chain-of-custody due to many suppliers Brazil FSC criteria for plantations challenging NGOs critical towards Veracel plantations Finland Current FSC criteria too strict (e.g. compared to Sweden) 29

Knowing every step 100% traceability Forest Certification is an important tool but Acceptable wood also comes from non-certified sources. Traceability systems are in place to verify this! 30

Conclusions

Conclusions Depending on sustainable forestry Sustainable forestry, which guarantees the continuing availability of wood in the future, is the fundamental basis of all Stora Enso s operations. Maximising wood flows from certified forests Forest certification promotes and communicates sustainable forest management. Stora Enso supports forest certification wherever the Group operates. Knowing every step 100% traceability Traceability involves verifying the origin of wood, tracking it all the way from the forest to wherever it first enters Stora Enso s possession. 32

Thank you!

From Russia with Transparency Tikhvin-Chalna Project 2004 2006 34 Stora Enso Axel Springer The Random House Group UK Russkiy Les Shuyales Tetra Pak Time Inc. WWW.TIKHVINPROJECT.RU

Why is Russia important to Stora Enso? Growing market and investment potential Globally over 50% of boreal forests in Russia Stora Enso s wood procurement area is close to Baltic, Finnish and Swedish markets 35

Stora Enso in Russia Strong long-term presence through own organisation Employees 2 000 over 95% Russian Wood procurement 7.3 Mm 3 sub EMAS, ISO 14001, ISO 9002 for traceability through Wood Supply Finland FSC certification for all own cutting volumes by 2006 WSR HQ District office Harvesting company Packaging board mill Sawmill Imatra Impilahti St. Petersburg Russkiy Les Nebolchi Moscow Arzamas Balabanovo 36

Why Tikhvin Project? To cover the whole supply chain Acceptability of fibre is crucial Integrate Stora Enso values and corporate social responsibility Balance environmental, social and economic responsibility Transparent communication about sustainability in Russian wood supply To improve the level of knowledge regarding Russia Russian Forests Newspapers Magazines Books 37

Tikhvin-Chalna Project in Russia Co-operation along the value chain Joint project with customers and wood suppliers to further improve the environmental and social aspects of wood procurement in Russia. Four focus areas identified legality of wood labour conditions forest certification community involvement Partners Russian logging company Russkiy Les Customers: Axel Springer, Random House, Time Inc., Tetra Pak Critical reviews by Transparency International Karelian Research Centre 38

Benefits of the Tikhvin-Chalna Project All partners improved sustainability practices Partners reviewed and upgraded their sustainability policies, guidelines, supplier requirements and management systems Logging companies adopted new technical tools to ensure the legality of wood improved labour safety Five of Stora Enso s logging companies certified more than 400 000 hectares of lease areas according to FSC Results and best practices are shared with other Russian wood suppliers through supplier training Read more at www.tikhvinproject.ru 39

Thank you!

Third party verification of traceability Chain-of-custody & Controlled Wood KUVAT TÄYTYY EDITOIDA Forest Wood Mill Customers procurement PEFC FSC CoC CoC CoC FSC CW FSC CW FSC CW 41

FSC and PEFC Examples of differences in Finland and Sweden Actions compared FSC (Finland) PEFC (FFCS) FSC (Sweden) Valuable habitats In the area to be certified, at least 5% of the forest land shall be set aside for biodiversity protection. No area target (Areas defined by the Forest Act shall be preserved) In the area to be certified, at least 5% of the forest land shall be set aside for biodiversity protection. Restriction on final felling At least 10% of the forest land shall be permanently placed outside final felling operations. This may include the above protected areas. No area target No area target Buffer zones along watercourses A buffer zone of at least 20 metres shall be reserved adjacent to waters. Logging operations in this zone are prohibited and soil surface may not be broken. The width of the buffer zone 3-5 metres. Logging can be carried out, but soil surface may not be broken. The width of the buffer zone not determined. Logging operations are prohibited and soil surface may not be broken. In practise smaller area than in Finland. 42

Sustainable Harvest 43