Title: The Reform of Public Timber Procurement in Japan
1The Reform of Public Timber Procurement in Japan
Chatham House Illegal Logging Update and
Stakeholder Consultation 20 July 2006
Federico Lopez-Casero Henry Scheyvens Kimihiko
Hyakumura Forest Conservation Project Institute
for Global Environmental Strategies (IGES)
2Overview
- Japans role in timber trade
- Japans response to illegal wood imports
- Legal and policy context of the public
procurement (PP) reform - Reform of timber procurement policy
- Definitions and Verification Modalities
- Policy Implementation a) domestic b) imported
timber - Preliminary observations a) certification /
legality verification schemes and b) addressees - Conclusions
31. Japans role in timber trade
- Total timber demand in Japan is about 89 million
m3 p.a., of which roughly 80 are imported
(worlds 3rd largest importer)
- Largest importer of tropical plywood 4.6
million m3 in 2005 - 3rd largest importer of tropical logs 1.6
million m3 in 2004 - Russia is now Japans main log supplier 11
million m3 in 2004
Source FRA (2005)
42. Japans response to illegal wood imports
- Since the G8 Summit in 2002, Japan has repeatedly
expressed its commitment to tackle illegal
logging - We will not use timber that has been produced
illegally (Forestry Agency 31.03.2005) - Government stresses financial/administrative
support to international organisations and
producer countries - Low engagement of private sector
- Only 12 of 115 firms claimed to make any effort
to assess the legality of the procured timber
(survey by JFWIA) - Potential of PP reform to force a response from
the private sector - Public sector 3 of total wood procurement
(estimated)
53. Legal and policy context of PP reform
- Green Purchasing Law Law Concerning the
Promotion of Procurement of Eco-Friendly Goods
and Services by the State and Other Entities of
2000 (Law No. 100/2000), enacted January 2001 - Basic Policy for the Promotion of Procurement of
Eco-Friendly Goods and Services - Identifies specific items for public procurement
- Revised on 1 April 2006 by including
- Legality as a criterion for evaluation
- Sustainability as a factor for consideration
- Refers to Guideline for Verification on Legality
and Sustainability of Wood and Wood Products
formulated by the Forestry Agency
64. Reform of timber procurement policy
- Guideline for Verification on Legality and
Sustainability of Wood and Wood Products - Prescribes modalities to verify legality and
sustainability - Aims to promote verified products as appropriate
items for procurement of the public sector - Is mandatory for central-level ministries/agencies
, Diet, courts and independent administrative
institutions, but also addresses local
government and administration - Gives the suppliers a lot of leeway when
verifying legality - Includes revision process based on
multi-stakeholder consultation (exploratory
committee and working groups)
75. Definitions and Verification Modalities
- Legality (Criterion for evaluation)
- Timber should be harvested in legal manner
consistent with procedures in the forest laws of
timber producing countries - Sustainability (Factor for consideration)
- should be harvested from the forest under
sustainable management - 3 different modalities for verification
- Forest certification / chain of custody
- Codes of conduct of Japans wood industry
associations - Own procedure set up by an individual company
8(1) Verification through Forest Certification
- Wood products certified under a forest
certification scheme - Accepted schemes include
- Local scheme Sustainable Green Ecosystem Council
(SGEC) - Overseas schemes FSC, SFI, CSA, PEFC, LEI, MTCC
- No justification, no prior assessment
- Very limited availability of certified timber in
Japan/Asia - Less than 1.85 of total forest area in Japan
(461,000 ha) in 2005 - Less than 1 of natural production forests in Asia
9(2) Verification under Codes of Conduct of Wood
Industry Associations
- The gist of this modality is voluntary codes of
conduct - established by wood industry associations
- procedures to guarantee that their members supply
wood products verified as legal (sustainable) - mandatory for their members (auditing,
penalisation) - Leading role of the Japan Federation of Wood
Industry Associations (JFWIA) as the umbrella
organisation - Established code of conduct in March 2006
- It has served as a template for most other
associations - Exception The Japan Lumber Importers
Association (JLIA) formulated their code in
November 2005
10Verification flow under modality (2)
- The JFWIA has focused on implementation in Japan
- explaining to stakeholders in Japan why
verification is needed - giving a domestic example for suppliers from
abroad
Information brochure edited by the JFWIA
Forest Owners
Producers (Owners Assoc.)
Manufacturers, distributors
Government purchasers
Evidence doc.
Evidence doc.
Invoices
Licence
Apply
Licence
Apply
Certificate (invoice)
What associations have to do
Process of licensing suppliers
11(3) Verification through own procedure set up by
an individual company
- Applies mainly to suppliers, which
- are not members of wood industry associations
- prefer handling timber under own code of conduct
- Introduced at the paper industrys urging
- To be used by chip/pulp importing businesses (?)
- No examples of implementation so far
- In principle it will work similarly to modality
(2)
12Flow under Modalities (2) and (3) for JLIA members
Modality (2)
Modality (3)
Segregated Management
DOCUMENT FLOW
DOCUMENT FLOW
Segregated Management as in modality (3)
STAGES
Notification log sales contract (copies)
Verifiable timber
Logging
Unveri-fiable
Logging notification or other evidence (copy)
Processing distribution
Invoice, shipping account, received documents
photos
Invoice (or incl.) evidence documentation
Not procured by gov.
Certificate based on evidence from all received
documents
Delivery
Invoice (or incl.) evidence documentation
Public Procurement
136. Policy implementation a) Domestic timber
- Modalities expected to work from September 2006
Number of associations involved in the
implementation process
Association type Codes of conduct Codes of conduct Others Sum
Association type Estab-lished Planned for June - August Others Sum
Local Timber Associations 12 16 18 46
Local Forest Owners Associations 1 6 23 30
National Industry Associations 11 0 4 15
Total 24 22 45 91
14b) Imported timber
Main schemes with high probability of being
accepted by the government as evidence of
legality
Major exporter countries Scheme
Indonesia BRIK, SKSHH
Malaysia Export Declaration, Form 2
Papua New Guinea SGS for now upcoming workshop
Russia Still being developed between JLIA partners in Russia
Re-export of manufactured products from China Prior research required, to be undertaken by Working Group
- Working groups (researchers) under Exploratory
Committee for Measures against Illegal Logging
investigating options
157. Preliminary observations a)
Certification/Legality Verification Schemes
- Modality (1)
- Government has no intention to assess
certification schemes - Modalities (2) and (3)
- Organised by the private sector in Japan
- Key role of industry associations (especially
JFWIA) - Initial evidence of policy impact
- National producers environmental NGOs see new
policy as a chance to enhance demand for domestic
timber - Importers under pressure to demonstrate legality
of imported timber, as domestic timber is
increasingly favoured
16b) Actors
- Main focus on the private sector
- Granted wide autonomy to establish their own
voluntary codes of conduct for the verification
of legality - Considered trustworthy by the Japanese government
- Prominent officials used the argument of the
Japanese way based on the assumption of the
goodness of human nature (??? - theory developed
by Mencius ??) - Less focus on the public procurer
- Expected to accept provided documentation for
legality verification in accordance with one of
the modalities - No independent government/ 3rd party verification
required - No major capacity building efforts or advice
intended - However, public procurer is free to pay a price
premium
178. Conclusions
- Stepwise approach
- Priority of legality over sustainability
- Need for studies, and for negotiations of private
sector and government with counterparts in
producer countries - So far, a paper trail is being implemented
- A major shortcoming is a lacking 3rd party
auditing - Remaining questions
- Will the private sector suppliers prove worthy of
the trust the government has put in them? - How reliable will the schemes for verification of
legality negotiated with the major producer
countries be?
Thank you!