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Timber—Sustainably Produced Imports

Tuesday 11 September 2007 Hansard source (external site)

Fitzsimons7. JEANETTE FITZSIMONS (Co-Leader—Green) Link to this
to the Prime Minister

Does her Government agree with Labour’s 2002 election promise to “Work towards ensuring that only sustainably produced timber is imported into New Zealand”; if so, on what date will this goal be achieved?

CullenHon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN (Deputy Prime Minister) Link to this

Yes. We are making good progress. A work programme under way at the moment will culminate in a full-scale review in February next year of the actions taken so far.

FitzsimonsJeanette Fitzsimons Link to this

Does the Prime Minister believe that the massive increase in imports of wooden furniture and furniture parts from $90 million worth to $236 million worth in just 2 years, much of it from unsustainable sources, is evidence that we are clearly moving further away from, rather than closer to, Labour’s 2002 election goal?

CullenHon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN Link to this

It is difficult to know, as I think the member realises, just exactly where some of that timber is coming from, and the nature of the logging practices surrounding it. That is why a lot of work is going on at the moment, working with the private sector, in relation to things like the practicality of regulatory and voluntary supply-chain requirements for legality, and, from next month, a major programme around international strategy, working with other countries, to seek ways to prevent illegally sourced timber from coming into New Zealand.

FitzsimonsJeanette Fitzsimons Link to this

Why does the Government’s sustainable procurement policy still allow the use of tropical timber, like kwila, for Government buildings, when Norway has recently banned the use of all tropical timber in Government projects, because it cannot be sure of whether it is sustainable and legal?

CullenHon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN Link to this

I think the member’s question almost answers itself, in the sense that there is a difference between being illegal and being unsustainable. The difficulty is telling the difference between the two, which is why Norway has taken that action. At this stage we have not taken that action, because at the end of the day it is not, in our view, necessary to ban sustainable logging in other countries that wish to engage in it. It may be advantageous economically, from their perspective. Of course, from the perspective of Kyoto Protocol obligations, there is nothing wrong with sustainable logging.

SmithHon Dr Nick Smith Link to this

How can the Prime Minister credibly call on other countries to reduce emissions, when New Zealand’s emissions are growing at the fastest rate ever in our history, when we have a trebling in the amount of unsustainable timber being imported, and when over the last 3 years we have seen the clearing of 20 million trees—the first time we have seen a net loss of forestry in 50 years?

CullenHon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN Link to this

There are many different questions there; I will take one of those. There has been a sustained reduction in plantings in New Zealand since about 1993-94, and the high levels—

SmithHon Dr Nick Smith Link to this

It went negative just 2 years ago.

CullenHon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN Link to this

—oh, shut up, just for a moment—and the high levels—

SmithHon Dr Nick Smith Link to this

Just tell the truth.

CullenHon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN Link to this

He does not want to hear.

FitzsimonsJeanette Fitzsimons Link to this

Can the Prime Minister tell the House whether achievement of Labour’s 2002 goal has been stalled due to free-trade talks with China, bearing in mind that over $100 million worth of furniture was imported from China into New Zealand last year, and that the Government’s own reports show that between a quarter and a third of all Chinese wood exports are derived from illegally logged timber?

CullenHon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN Link to this

No, not in the least! To believe that would be the same as to believe that pyjamas were 2 percent formaldehyde in content, which was shown to be a complete lie by the TV programme that put it out.

FitzsimonsJeanette Fitzsimons Link to this

Was the Minister saying, in his last reply, that the Government’s own reports are a complete lie when they say that between a quarter and a third of all Chinese wood exports are derived from illegally logged timber—information we were relying on in good faith?

CullenHon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN Link to this

I was saying that the trade talks with China are not held up by any consideration of illegal logging of timber in China. What I was saying was a complete lie was the matter that the Green Party did pick up and run with, which was the extraordinary claim that imported pyjamas from China were 2 percent formaldehyde in content. That was about as realistic as Ms Kedgley attacking the dreaded dihydrogen oxide content, as she did once, famously, in the past.

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