Environment NGOs Urge An End To Russian Wood Imports Amidst War With Ukraine

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As the world looks on in horror as Russian armed forces advance into Ukraine, many are looking for ways to kneecap the financial machinery underpinning Russia’s military.

The European Union has already imposed an unprecedented package of sanctions. But environmental organizations in Europe and further afield are urging further action, including Russia’s lucrative trade in wood.

A group of over 120 human rights and environmental organizations – primarily from Eastern Europe, including Ukraine and Belarus – is calling on governments to ban imports of all wood and timber products from Russia and its ally Belarus. The group is also urging forestry certification programs to immediately stop certifying wood from these two countries.

Sam Lawson, director of Earthsight, explained the impetus for the campaign: “Ukrainian homes are being bombed everyday and many thousands are already homeless. Decisive action needs to be taken across the sector in solidarity.”

The sector they’re targeting is enormous. According to the coalition, wood and timber products from Russian and Belarus were worth $13.9 billion in 2021.

These products include paper, furniture, and wood pellets. Although they’ve been associated with deforestation and rising carbon emissions, wood pellets continue to heat many European homes. According to Lawson, “In terms of bioenergy/pellet importers, Van Leer and CM Biomass are among the biggest importers of wood from Russia. They should be responding promptly to this crisis and shutting down Russian operations.” Earthsight analysis indicates that most of Denmark’s wood imports from Russia come in the form of wood pellets traded by CM Biomass, one of the world’s largest independent wood pellet companies.

This type of pressure may already be having an effect. Two of the 15 companies in Europe and the US identified by Earthsight as the biggest importers of Russian wood, IKEA and the Finnish pulp and paper corporation Stora Ensor, recently announced that they would be pausing their operations in Russia.

The wood campaign isn’t the only attempt to halt imports of natural resources from Russia. The Ukrainian Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources is also calling for the EU to ban Russian forestry products.

Another campaign is targeting Russian oil and gas. According to a coalition of 25 European NGOs convened by the campaign group Transport & Environment, oil has financed the Russian military for decades; and every day EU countries spend hundreds of millions of euros on Russian oil and gas.

Cutting off this supply could harm ordinary Europeans who depend on Russian oil and gas for affordable heating. So governments that take the principled stance of ceasing the Russian fossil fuels and wood trade will need to investigate fuel subsidies for low-income residents, as well as investing rapidly in genuinely renewable forms of energy (unlike wood pellets).

Looking toward the future, Transport & Environment are calling, among other measures, for a target of 50% electric car and van sales by 2025 – ahead of existing EU and UK targets.

Heorhiy Veremiychyk, of the National Ecological Center of Ukraine, put it poignantly: “We need urgent action to cripple the Putin regime’s ability to fund the war. Russia continues to receive payments from European governments that inadvertently fund Russia’s assault on Ukraine. That must end.”

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