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Approaching cyclone could worsen rosewood logging in Madagascar
Rhett A. Butler, mongabay.com
January 09, 2010



Red ruffed lemur from the Masoala Peninsula. This endangered red ruffed lemur is endemic to Masoala, where much of the current rosewood logging in Madagascar is occurring. The more widespread species of ruffed lemur is black-and-white. Photo taken by Rhett A. Butler in 2009

Cyclone Edzani is presently on course to hit Madagascar sometime late next week. The storm could bring devastation to Madagascar, which is already reeling from an economic crisis caused by a military coup in March. Previous cyclones, which hit Madagascar every few years on average, have caused extensive damage and loss of life.

Cyclones are also linked to rosewood logging. While harvesting of precious hardwoods for export has been prohibited for a decade, an exception has been made for "fallen trees" ostensibly knocked down by powerful cyclones. However in practice, this has created a loophole for illegal logging since the government has never conducted an inventory of downed trees following a cyclone. Timber traders can easily claim the logs they've harvested the result of storm damage (similar approaches are also employed by loggers in the United States and elsewhere). So should Cyclone Edzani come anywhere near rainforests that contain rosewood and ebony, expect an escalation in logging. Since national parks are about the only place where these valuable trees still stand, these biological jewels will be targeted.

Rowan Moore Gerety detailed the link between rosewood logging and cyclones in an article published on mongabay.com/wildmadagascar.org last month:
    In 2000, the government stopped issuing new logging permits in the northeast and banned the export of raw timber. Four years later, in an episode that demonstrates timber traders' ability to control the political and economic context in which they operate, an exception was made for trees that had fallen during the passage of Cyclone Gafilo.

    Foresters like Sylvain Velomera, former director of Marojejy National Park, are skeptical that cyclones damage rosewood and ebony trees at all: "it's only a justification to allow cutting of rosewood, since cyclones do not blow over rosewood, only papaya and coconut and other small vulnerable trees." Furthermore, when the government lifted the export ban after the cyclone, it did so without prior assessment of cyclone-damaged trees or of existing lumber inventories. As a result, the orders restricting logging to fallen trees were more or less meaningless. In fact, they provided good cover for extensive logging inside national parks.

    Loggers further capitalized on government leniency by using authorization forms with "titles not found in any legal text," the EIA/GW report says, namely, "permis de ramassage," and "permis de carbonisation" ('collection permit' and 'carbonization permit,' respectively): While these forms may have been issued by different agencies of the Malagasy government, they are not supported by Malagasy law. In the aftermath of Cyclone Gafilo, as timber traders exported large quantities of officially recognized "damaged wood," they replenished existing stock with illicit lumber from their subcollectors. As a general rule, the EIA's Andrea Johnson told me, logging activities in SAVA are poorly documented--logging camps, logs, and stumps, are all unmarked and unnumbered, making it nearly impossible ascertain the origin and legality of particular "bola-bolas" (logs) once several streams of wood have mingled with standing inventory in the same supply chain. It is standard practice for timber traders in the northeast to over-report cyclone damage and existing inventory, and to neglect to mark logs or properly document their logging operations, all of which has enabled them to harvest and export wood from the national parks under the guise of legality.

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(12/16/2009) In the midst of cyclone season, a 'dead' period for tourism to Madagascar's east coast, Vohémar, a sleepy town dominated by the vanilla trade, is abuzz. Vanilla prices have scarcely been lower, but the hotels are full and the port is busy. "This afternoon, it was like a 4 wheel drive show in front of the Direction Regionale des Eaux & Forets," one source wrote in an email on November 29th: "Many new 4x4, latest model, new plane at the airport, Chinese everywhere."












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CITATION:
Rhett A. Butler, mongabay.com (January 09, 2010). Approaching cyclone could worsen rosewood logging in Madagascar. http://inspire.mongabay.com/news/2010/0109-rosewood_and_cyclone.html



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