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This site attempts to help people interested in forest certification
orient themselves to the sources of information available on the web. We
do not endorse any particular certification system but are interested in
the role forest certification may be able to play in achieving sustainable
forestry. If you have any questions or comments please let us know.
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Where can I purchase certified wood
products?
- Certified products and suppliers, or potential buyers of certified
products, visit the following databases:
- Shop for certified decking products, furniture, timber, and flooring
at ForestWorld.
- Explore what
you can do as a consumer, retailer, manufacturer, builder, or
forester to help support sustainable forest certification and purchase
certified products.
- Investigate Home Depot's sustainable wood
purchasing policy.
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Who creates certification standards in North
America?
Four groups currently set the standards for forest certification in
North America. • Forest
Stewardship Council (FSC operates around the world)
•Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI operates in the
U.S. and Canada)
• American Tree Farm System (ATFS operates within the U.S.)
• Canadian
Standards Association (CSA operates within Canada)
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What are the guidelines or standards for certification
in North America?
-
Forest Stewardship Council. While
FSC does have a set of 10
Principles and Criteria for forest management that are applicable to
all FSC-certified forests throughout the world, FSC also has
regionally-based standards.
Nine
US regional standards have been developed, and seven have been
accredited by FSC International. There are nine regions where standards
are either endorsed or actively being developed.
Pacific Coast Rocky Mountain Southwest Ozark-Ouachita Northeast Appalachian Southeast Lake States Mississippi Alluvial Valley
In the absence of endorsed regional or national standards, Forest
Stewardship Council accredited
auditors use their own interim standards or guidelines to conduct
certifications (see next question as well).
-
The Sustainable Forestry Initiative's standards were
originally created by the American Forest & Paper Association. As of
July 2000 further changes to the standards became the responsibility of
the Sustainable Forestry Board. The current standard are
valid through end of 2009.
-
American Tree
Farm System. Beginning July 1, 2004, forested properties entering
the American Tree Farm System or existing Tree Farms due for their five
year reinspections will be measured against the American Forest
Foundation’s revised set of Standards of Sustainability for Forest
Certification. The American Forest Foundation (AFF), sponsor of
ATFS, approved the 2004-2008 Standards in December 2002 and directed
national staff to revise the inspection process, provide refresher
training for inspecting foresters, and inform Tree Farmers about the new
Standards.
- Canadian Standards Association Forest Products Marking
Program. The CSA SFM Mark demonstrates to customers that forest products
bearing this Mark have originated from a forest certified to Canada's
National Standard for Sustainable Forest Management (CAN/CSA Z809)
and have been verified through an independent chain of custody audit.
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What are the differences between these
certification systems?
- The YPFC Key Controversies Matrix provides a brief overview of differences among forest certification schemes operating in the US and Canada.
- The YPFPG report Assessing USGBC's forest policy options provides a comprehensive comparison among forest certification schemes that apply to forest management in the US and Canada.
- The article, Forest Certification in North America by E. Hansen et al.,
2006 provides a brief comparison of certification systems in North
America.
- In 2001, Meridian
Institute completed a Comparative Analysis of the
Forest Stewardship Council and Sustainable Forestry Initiative
Certification Program, two of the most competitive systems in the United
States.
- Canadian Environmental Network
has posted a chart
comparing the Sustaintable Forestry Initiative (SFI), Forest Stewardship
Council (FSC), Canadian Standards Association (CSA), and International
Organization for Standardization (ISO) programs.
- Certification Canada provides information on forest certification in Canada, including general descriptions of the FSC, CSA, SFI, and PEFC systems.
- Read a comparison of the FSC and the
certification system of the International Organization for Standardization.
- MetaFore has
created a matrix
comparing the different standards of certification systems active in the
U.S. [American Tree Farm Systems (ATFS), Canadian Standards Association
(CSA), Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), Program for Endorsement of
Forest Certification Schemes (PEFCS), and Sustainable Foresty Initiative
(SFI).
- The Confederation of
European Paper Industries has compiled a matrix
for comparing forest certification programs internationally.
- Just what differences exist between the programs is a highly
contested issue, with some environmental groups arguing that the
differences are large (Behind the Logo), while industry associations,
referring to commissioned reports, have argued that while programs may
emphasize different issues, they share common approaches and concerns
(see, for example, PEFC Council website)
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Who creates certification standards across the
globe?
A partial list of links to organizations that create standards for
forest certification is listed below.
The ISO or the International Organization for Standardization allows
for certification of forests under its ISO 14000 series.
The Programme for the Endorsement of Forest
Certification schemes (PEFC) program works to promote mutual recognition of
certification standards throughout the world. Explore what’s happening all
over the globe.
Forest Stewardship Council (FSC).
The Forestry Commission of Great Britain, in association with the
Forest Service (Northern Ireland) published "UK Indicators of
Sustainable Forestry" on 31 October 2002. The 40 indicators cover a
wide range of aspects of sustainable forestry in the UK. These standards
are now used by PEFC UK and recognized as equivalent to the UK FSC
standard.
The Indonesian Ecolabelling Institute provides standards in
Indonesia.
The Malaysian Timber
Certification Council is a not-for-profit organization that provides
standards for good management in Malaysian forests.
The BOLFOR II link to provides information on forest
certification efforts in Bolivia.
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Who assesses forestlands for certification?
The organizations that assess forestland for certification are
different from the groups that provide the standards for certification.
Below are two examples.
Accreditation Services International (ASI) maintains a list of FSC accredited certification bodies.
The Sustainable Forestry Initiative does not require
third-party assessment however it does provide a list of SFI approved third-party
certifiers.
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What is tracking or chain of custody?
Wood Flow Tracking, a system used by SFI, and Chain of Custody, a
system used by FSC, is the ability to track wood from the forest to the
shelves of retail stores so that the consumer can be assured that the wood
they buy comes from a certified forest. The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI), Canada’s
National Sustainable Forest Management Standard, and the
Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification schemes (PEFC) all require
that the chain of custody be tracked. Clicking on the certifiers’ names,
above, will provide information about their chain of custody.
SFI Tracking:
SFI program participants must have an audit-able system in place that
monitors management and harvesting activities throughout the supply
chain.
To implement this standard, participants must establish systems that
generate reliable information pertaining to wood purchased from private
forestland owners. SFI program participants must be able to characterize
the area from which their wood originates, and assess data that
accurately reflects the conditions on the ground related to the wood
coming to their facility. This data can be collected internally by the
SFI program participant, or externally from a variety of sources, but it
must be credible, verifiable and relevant to the participant's specific
operations. Third-party certified participants must subject their
procurement systems to independent third party audits. This means that
program participants must establish the ability to monitor all levels of
the supply system and auditors must be able to verify the reliability of
reported results.
FSC Chain of Custody:
Chain-of-custody, developed and accredited by the Forest Stewardship
Council (FSC), refers to the complete process by which wood is
transformed from a tree in the forest to a final product provided in a
wholesale or retail market. In order to ensure that the consumer knows
s/he is getting an FSC certified product after the wood leaves an FSC
certified forest, the wood must be able to be tracked at every stage—to
a sawmill, to a processing facility, to the marketplace. FSC requires
companies all along the supply chain to be verified through a third
party certification process. Certification auditors follow strict
guidelines, established by FSC, for companies along the supply chain to
obtain 'chain of custody' certificationt. Therefore, in order for a
distributor, a furniture production facility, a wood flooring
manufacturer to sell an FSC certified product, they first must obtain
chain of custody certification. Chain of custody requires a company to
develop a system that separates certified from non-certified wood to
eliminate contamination of non-certified wood and to maintain the
marketing value provided by certifying their products.
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How is certified wood labeled so that I know that
the wood that I am buying is certified?
Labeling is a hot topic in marketing certified forest products. FSC and
SFI have different systems and requirements for labeling. Read about
them by clicking on the links.
Forest Stewardship Council On-Product Labels
Read about the SFI label and how you can identify it.
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Where can I get up-to-date news on forest
certification and new developments?
Get up-to-date news on certification from the Forest News
Watch, the World Wildlife Fund, the Forests
and the European Union Resource Network (FERN), the American Forest and Paper Association, the Forest Stewardship Council
U.S., or the American Tree Farm System. Also see the Sustainable
Forestry Board.
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