Green Carbon, Black Trade

Illegal Logging, Tax Fraud and Laundering in the Worlds Tropical Forests. Environmental crime and the illegal grabbing of natural resources is becoming an ever more sophisticated activity requiring national authorities and law enforcement agencies to develop responses commensurate with the scale and the complexity of the challenge to keep one step ahead.

GREEN CARBON, BLACKTRADE A RAPID RESPONSE ASSESSMENT ILLEGAL LOGGING, TAX FRAUD AND LAUNDERING IN THE WORLD’S TROPICAL FORESTS

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Nellemann, C., INTERPOL Environmental Crime Programme (eds). 2012. Green Carbon, Black Trade: Illegal Logging, Tax Fraud and Laundering in the Worlds Tropical Forests. A Rapid Response Assessment. United Nations Environment Programme, GRID-

Arendal. www.grida.no ISBN: 978-82-7701-102-8 Printed by Birkeland Trykkeri AS, Norway

UNEP and INTERPOL promote environmentally sound practices globally and in their own activi- ties. This publication is printed on fully recycled paper, FSC certified, post-consumer waste and chlorine-free. Inks are vegetable-based and coatings are water-based. Their distribution policy aims to reduce their carbon footprints.

Disclaimer The contents of this report do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of UNEP or contributory organisations. The designations employed and the presentations do not imply the expressions of any opinion whatsoever on the part of UNEP or contributory organisa- tions concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city, com- pany or area or its authority, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.

GREEN CARBON, BLACKTRADE ILLEGAL LOGGING, TAX FRAUD AND LAUNDERING IN THE WORLD’S TROPICAL FORESTS

A RAPID RESPONSE ASSESSMENT

Christian Nellemann (Editor) INTERPOL Environmental Crime Programme

Editorial Team

Riccardo Pravettoni

Cartography

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PREFACE Environmental crime and the illegal grabbing of natural resources is becoming an ever more sophisticated activity requiring national authorities and law enforcement agencies to develop responses commensurate with the scale and the complexity of the challenge to keep one step ahead.

This report – Green Carbon, Black Trade – by UNEP and INTER- POL focuses on illegal logging and its impacts on the lives and livelihoods of often some of the poorest people in the world set aside the environmental damage. It underlines how criminals are combining old fashioned methods such as bribes with high tech methods such as computer hacking of government web sites to obtain transportation and other permits. The report spotlights the increasingly sophisticated tactics being deployed to launder illegal logs through a web of palm oil plantations, road networks and saw mills. Indeed it clearly spells out that illegal logging is not on the decline, rather it is becoming more advanced as cartels become better organized including shifting their illegal activities in order to avoid national or local police efforts. By some estimates, 15 per cent to 30 per cent of the volume of wood traded globally has been obtained illegally. Unless addressed, the criminal ac- tions of the few may endanger not only the development pros- pects for the many but also some of the creative and catalytic initiatives being introduced to recompense countries and com- munities for the ecosystem services generated by forests. One of the principal vehicles for catalyzing positive environ- mental change and sustainable development is the Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation initia- tive (REDD or REDD+). If REDD+ is to be sustainable over the long term, it requests and requires all partners to fine tune the operations, and to ensure that they meet the highest standards of rigour and that efforts to reduce deforestation in one location are not offset by an increase elsewhere.

If REDD+ is to succeed, payments to communities for their conservation efforts need to be higher than the returns from ac- tivities that lead to environmental degradation. Illegal logging threatens this payment system if the unlawful monies chang- ing hands are bigger than from REDD+ payments. The World’s forests represent one of the most important pil- lars in countering climate change and delivering sustainable development. Deforestation, largely of tropical rainforests, is responsible for an estimated 17 per cent of all man-made emis- sions, and 50 per cent more than that from ships, aviation and land transport combined. Today only one-tenth of primary for- est cover remains on the globe. Forests also generate water supplies, biodiversity, pharma- ceuticals, recycled nutrients for agriculture and flood pre- vention, and are central to the transition towards a Green Economy in the context of sustainable development and pov- erty eradication. Strengthened international collaboration on environmental laws and their enforcement is therefore not an option. It is in- deed the only response to combat an organized international threat to natural resources, environmental sustainability and efforts to lift millions of people out of penury.

Achim Steiner UN Under-Secretary General and UNEP Executive Director

Ronald K. Noble INTERPOL Secretary General

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SUMMARY Forests worldwide bind CO 2 and store it – so called Green carbon – and help mitigate climate change. However, deforestation accounts for an estimated 17 per cent of global carbon emissions: about 1.5 times greater than emissions from all the world’s air, road, rail and shipping traffic combined.

The vast majority of deforestation and illegal logging takes place in the tropical forests of the Amazon basin, Central Africa and Southeast Asia. Recent studies into the extent of illegal log- ging estimate that illegal logging accounts for 50–90 per cent of the volume of all forestry in key producer tropical countries and 15–30 per cent globally. Meanwhile, the economic value of global illegal logging, including processing, is estimated to be worth between US$ 30 and US$ 100 billion, or 10–30 per cent of global wood trade. A number of certification schemes and programmes have evolved to reduce illegal logging. These schemes, such as vol- untary trade agreements including the EU Forest Law Enforce- ment, Governance and Trade (FLEGT) Voluntary Partnership Agreements (VPAs), or Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certification, have been successful in bringing stakeholders together and generating incentives for legal exports and more sustainable forestry. The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) is increasingly being used by states to ensure that trade in listed timber species is legal, sustainable and traceable. Around 350 tree species are now in- cluded in the three CITES Appendices, and trade in their prod- ucts is therefore subject to regulation to avoid utilization that is incompatible with their survival. CITES is also working with the International Tropical Timber Organization (ITTO) to pro- mote sustainable forest management and to build the capacity of developing states to effectively implement the Convention as it relates to listed tree species.

The main aim of the above mechanisms are to promote sus- tainable trade. With the exception of CITES, they were not designed to combat organized crime and are not effective in combating illegal logging, corruption and laundering of ille- gal timber in tropical regions. Other incentives and subsidies to offer alternative incomes are unlikely to be effective when illegal logging and laundering offer much higher profits and very low risk. Widespread collusive corruption from local of- ficials to the judiciary, combined with decentralized govern- ment structures in many tropical countries, provide little or no economic incentive for illegal loggers and corrupt officials to change their practices. To become effective, voluntary trade programmes and the ef- fective implementation of CITES, must be combined with an international law enforcement investigative and operational ef- fort in collaboration with domestic police and investigative task forces in each country. This is to ensure that a local decline in illegal logging is not offset by increases elsewhere, as interna- tional cartels move to new sources of illegal timber. In the last five years, illegal logging has moved from direct illegal logging to more advanced methods of concealment and timber laundering. In this report more than 30 ways of conducting illegal logging, laundering, selling and trading il- legal logs are described. Primary methods include falsifica- tion of logging permits, bribes to obtain logging permits (in some instances noted as US$ 20–50,000 per permit), logging beyond concessions, hacking government websites to obtain transport permits for higher volumes or transport, laundering

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illegal timber by establishing roads, ranches, palm oil or for- est plantations and mixing with legal timber during transport or in mills. The much heralded decline of illegal logging in the mid- 2000s in some tropical regions was widely attributed to a short-term law enforcement effort. However, long-term trends in illegal logging and trade have shown that this was temporary, and illegal logging continues. More importantly, an apparent decline in illegal logging is due to more advanced laundering operations masking criminal activities, and not necessarily due to an overall decline in illegal logging. In many cases a tripling in the volumes of timber “originating” from plantations in the five years following the law enforce- ment crack-down on illegal logging has come partly from cover operations by criminals to legalize and launder illegal logging operations. Other cases of increased illegal logging involve road construction and the cutting of wide corridors, which facilitates land clearing by impoverished settlers, who are later driven away by ranchers and soy producers, such as has occurred in the Amazon. Companies make money from clearing the initial forest, have impoverished farmers convert forest land to farmland, and then push these farmers off to establish rangeland for cattle. Other scams include the falsifi- cation of eco-certification. Funnelling large volumes of illegal timber through legal planta- tions, across borders or through mills, is another effective way to launder logs. In some instances illegal loggers mix illicit tim- ber with 3–30 times the amount of officially processed timber,

which also constitutes tax fraud. Many of these illegal opera- tions involve bribes to forest officials, police and military, and even royalties to local village heads. Illegal logging operations have also in some cases involved murder, violence, threats and atrocities against indigenous forest-living peoples. The challenges already facing indigenous peoples are further compounded as companies now launder illegal logging under fraudulent permits for ranches or planta- tion establishment schemes. Much of the laundering of illegal timber is only possible due to large flows of funding from investors based in Asia, the EU and the US, including investments through pension funds. As funds are made available to establish plantations opera- tions to launder illegal timber and obtain permits illegally or pass bribes, investments, collusive corruption and tax fraud combined with low risk and high demand, make it a high- ly profitable illegal business, with revenues up to 5–10 fold higher than legal practices for all parties involved. This also undermines subsidized alternative livelihood incentives avail- able in several countries. Efforts to stop this black trade must concentrate on increasing the probability of apprehending illegal logging syndicates and their networks, reducing the flow of timber from regions with high degree of illegality by adapting a multi-disciplinary law enforcement approach, developing economic incentives by dis- couraging the use of timber from these regions and introduc- ing a rating og companies based on the likelihood of their in-

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al task forces working with INTERPOL, against logging compa- nies, plantations and mills.

The newly established International Consortium on Combating Wildlife Crime (ICCWC), chaired by the CITES Secretariat and comprised of INTERPOL, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), the World Bank and the World Customs organization (WCO), provides a substantial new commitment to the sharing and coordination of a comprehensive international effort to help combat wildlife crime, including illegal logging. ICCWC represents the entire enforcement chain – customs, police and justice. It also addresses anti-money laundering and serves as a model at the international level for the sort of coop- eration that is required amongst enforcement agencies at the national level to more effectively combat illegal international trade in timber products. The cost of implementing an effective international law en- forcement scheme and training capacity to substantially reduce the emissions from illegal logging is estimated to be approxi- mately US$ 20–30 million dollars annually. While INTERPOL is currently leading the police related law enforcement response through Project LEAF, its success requires strong, constant, and sustainable commitment from governments, civil society, and the private sector.

volvement in illegal practices to discourage investors and stock markets from funding them. When combined with economic incentives, through REDD+ and trade opportunities through CITES and FLEGT, these actions may become successful in reducing deforestation, and ultimately, carbon emissions. Priority attention must also be given to investigation of tax fraud, corruption and anti-laundering, including substantially increasing the investigative and operational capacity of nation-

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RECOMMENDATIONS

Strengthen and consider funding opportunities for the de- velopment of a full-fledged Law Enforcement Assistance to Forests (LEAF) programme under INTERPOL and UNEP in close collaboration with all ICCWC partners, REDD+, FLEGT and other relevant programmes and agencies. The objective of the programme is undertaking coordinated in- ternational and improved national law enforcement and in- vestigative efforts to reduce illegal logging, the international trade in illegally felled timber and forest-related corruption including tax fraud and laundering. Increase national investigative and operational national capacities through an INTERPOL based training scheme to strengthen and build national task forces on combating illegal logging and laundering. This includes strengthen- ing national law enforcement agency cooperation and co- ordination through supporting the formation of national taskforces to ensure enforcement of laws and regulations related to forests. Centralize nationally the issuing of permits for land clearance whether for logging, plantations or ranching and permits for road transport of timber with strong anti-counterfeit measures.

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of illegality in collaboration with National Central Bureaus (NCBs) and other relevant stakeholders. This includes de- fining upper limits of volumes of logs to be transported, restricting transport funnels of all timber from such il- legal logging regions and monitoring forest change on a regional basis. Encourage national tax fraud investigations with a partic- ular focus on plantations and mills laundering, under- or over-reporting of volumes and over- or under-invoicing, tax fraud and mis-use of government subsidies. Reduce investment attractiveness in forests enterprises ac- tive in regions identified as areas of illegal logging by im- plementing an international INTERPOL-based rating sys- tem of companies extracting, operating in or buying from regions with a high degree of illegal activity. This includes investigating possible complicity of investors in funding il- legal activities related to logging, transporting, laundering or purchasing illegally logged timber. Strengthen the resources available to ICCWC to have a dedicated role, unit(s) and responsibility at global and re- gional levels, as appropriate, specifically tasked to combat illegal logging and international trade in illegally logged or procured timber and wood products.

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Develop an INTERPOL classification system of geographic regions within countries according to the suspected degree

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CONTENTS

PREFACE SUMMARY RECOMMENDATIONS INTRODUCTION ILLEGAL LOGGING: HOW IS IT DONE? TEN WAYS TO CONDUCT ILLEGAL LOGGING BOTTLENECKS IN THE BLACK WOOD TRADE LAUNDERING ILLEGAL LOGS AND WOOD PRODUCTS TWENTY WAYS TO LAUNDER ILLEGALLY LOGGED WOOD EXPORT AND TRADE IN ILLEGAL LOGS FINANCING ILLEGAL LOGGING AND PROFIT LAUNDERING COMBATING ILLEGAL LOGGING

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CONTRIBUTORS AND REVIEWERS REFERENCES

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INTRODUCTION

The importance of the world’s forests to global efforts to reduce carbon emissions cannot be underestimated. While living forests are vital to reducing carbon in our atmosphere, defor- estation accounts for an estimated 17 per cent of global carbon emissions – around 1.5 times greater than those from all the world’s air, road, rail and shipping traffic combined. The vast majority of deforestation and illegal logging takes place in the tropical forests of the Amazon, Central Africa and Southeast Asia. Recent studies into the extent of illegal logging estimate that it accounts for 50–90 per cent of the volume of forestry in key producer tropi- cal countries and 15–30 per cent of global forest production (INTERPOL-World Bank 2009). Reducing deforestation, and especially illegal logging, is therefore the fastest, most effective and least controversial means to reduce global emissions of climate gases.

The United Nations-backed REDD and REDD+ programmes are the principle instruments protecting forests to reduce these emis- sions. REDD and REDD+ provide national and international legal frameworks, including agreements, conventions and certification schemes, to reduce illegal logging and support sustainable prac- tices. With billions of dollars being invested in avoiding tropical deforestation, the challenges of corruption and laundering illegal- ly logged timber become a major hurdle to reduce illegal logging and its role in climate emissions, loss of biodiversity and human security (UNEP 2007, 2010; 2011; SIKOR and To 2011).  While recent years have seen increased concern for sustainable forestry only 8 per cent of the world’s forests are certified as sus- tainably managed, with over 90 per cent of these certified forests in North America and Europe (UNEP 2009). In addition, it is es- timated that illegal logging still occurs in many formally protected forests, especially in tropical countries (UNEP 2007). If illegal log- ging cannot be controlled, it is inevitable that the global communi- ty’s efforts to reduce and offset carbon emissions will be undone.

be at least US$10 billion per year. (INTERPOL/World Bank 2009). The trade in illegally harvested timber is also highly lucrative for criminal elements and has been estimated at a minimum US$11 billion – comparable to the production value of drugs, which is estimated at around US$13 billion (INTERPOL/World Bank 2009; UNEP 2011). Most estimates however, have focused on estimates of import-export discrep- ancies and other official statistics, neglecting the vast under- reporting constituting both laundering and deliberate under- reporting. In some instances this is up to 30 times greater than the official volumes reported and a significant way to increase criminal profitability.  The official value of the global wood trade has been estimated at around US$327 billion dollars (FAO 2007; UNEP 2009). Esti- mates for illegal logging in Indonesia alone, however, range from US$600 million to US$8.7 billion per year (Luttrell et al . 2011). If illegal logging consists of as much as 10–30 per cent of the total logging worldwide, with some estimates as high as 20–50 per cent when laundering of illegal wood is included, then the value of it is at least US$30–100 billion (NCB-Rome 2008; IN- TERPOL/World Bank 2009).

In addition to the environmental damage, the loss of revenue and tax income from illegally harvested wood is estimated to

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The health of our forests

Net loss of forest Current forest cover Net gain of forest

Dryland degradation

Source: Adapted from a map by Philippe Rekacewicz originally published in UNEP-FAO Vital Forest Graphics , 2009; data source from MA 2005.

The criminal groups involved in illegal logging also damage local communities through loss of income and livelihood, life threatening environmental damage, corruption of officials, fraud, money laundering, extortion, threats of violence, and even murder (INTERPOL 2009; Hiemstra van der Horst 2011). It is clear that, in spite of certification and management ef- forts, illegal logging has not stopped. Indeed it has remained high in many regions including the Amazon, Central Africa and Southeast Asia. In some areas, it has actually increased in recent years. With the billion dollar investments in REDD+ and a develop- ing carbon trade market designed to facilitate further invest- ments in reducing emissions, illegal international cartels and networks pose a major risk to emission reductions and cli- mate change mitigation through corruption and fraud, while also jeopardizing development goals and poverty alleviation in many countries.

In the mid-2000s, some countries, like Indonesia, experienced what appeared to be a decline in illegal logging following in- creased enforcement efforts, arrests and even logging morato- riums. However, what became apparent was that a decline in logging in parts of Indonesia triggered an increase in demand elsewhere, such as in the Papua New Guinea, Myanmar and the Greater Congo Basin (UNEP 2011). Indeed, as demand for timber or wood products is rising in many countries, includ- ing China (which is expected to almost double its wood con- sumption by 2020 with world demand for timber expected to increase by 70 per cent by 2020) (INTERPOL-World Bank 2009; UNEP 2009), a reduction in logging in one geographic location will be offset by increased logging in another.  Another critical issue is that most illegal logging takes place in regions characterized by conflict or widespread corruption. There are advanced corruption schemes in many tropical for- est regions, including the Amazon Basin, the Congo Basin, Southeast Asia and Indonesia. Enforcement efforts during the

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Annual value of illegal logging Compared with other activities

Thousand million US Dollars

Illegal logging (lower estimate) Value of World sheries Illegal logging (higher estimate)

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93 30 21

Illegal wildlife tra cking, 2005

Sources:WorldBank;WWF;TRAFFIC;FAO.

mid-2000s simply triggered a series of more advanced means to launder illegally logged timber or to conduct illegal logging under the cover of plantation development, palm oil establish- ment, road construction, redefinition of forest classifications, exceeding legal permit limits or obtaining illicit logging per- mits through bribes (Amacher, et al . 2012). While some success was achieved in Brazil and, temporarily, in Indonesia with national initiatives including joint security sweeps (Operasi Hutan Lestari (OHL) sustainable forest opera- tion), illegal logging activity has not declined. Indeed a large share, estimated from 40–80 per cent, of total volumes remains illegal (Luttrel, et al . 2011). Traditional law enforcement efforts limited to operations against illegal logging have been effective in protecting some national parks, but have also changed the nature of the illegal logging to more refined methods including widespread collusive corruption and laundering of illegal log- ging under fake permits, ostensible plantation establishment and palm oil development.

Illegal logging and black trade in illegally harvested wood prod- ucts has continued due in large part to a lack of coordinated international law enforcement efforts to combat the organized transnational nature of the criminal groups involved. Indeed, law enforcement has often been associated with “guns on the ground”, rather than full investigative operations examining tax fraud and laundering, which are essential for combating mod- ern illegal logging syndicates. The purpose of this report is to provide an overview of how illegal logging takes place and describe common methods of how it is laundered and financed and its primary destina- tions. The report also reviews some of the current practices and initiatives to combat illegal logging and provides infor- mation about how illegal logging syndicates and black wood traders are evading many current law enforcement initiatives and trade incentives.

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Logging companies devastate the Penan’s rainforest home, which they rely on for their survival.

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“We’re not like the people in the towns, who have money and can buy things. If we lose all the things the forest gives us, we will die.” Ba Lai, Penan man

Penan armed with blowpipes block the road as Shin Yang logging trucks approach.

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ILLEGAL LOGGING: HOW IS IT DONE?

Illegal logging takes place in many forms, from illegal logging in protected areas or large-scale illegal logging without permits in remote areas, conflict zones and border areas, to advanced laundering operations mixing legal with illegal logs through bribery, re-definition of forest classification, forged permits, exceeding legal concessions and clearing or laundering through plantations, biofuel production and ranching establish- ments. In this chapter, an overview of the most common methods of illegal logging is provided. Methods used to launder the illegal cuts and funding the operations are explained in the following chapters.

How logging operations work

The processing recipients

For any forestry operation to log an area, there are three ba- sic considerations: 1) Deciding on the type of logging to be done i.e. selective cutting for valuable rare woods or clear- cutting of areas typically for timber and pulp; 2) Extraction of the wood to a road or river by skidders, tractors or other machinery, for temporary storage before longer transport by road or river; 3) Transport by truck, river barges or floats to the nearest mill, harbour or border crossing for domestic or international export. The costs involved are a function of the terrain and acces- sibility to logs, cost of cutting and extraction, distance by roads, rivers or ships to buyers and mills domestically or internationally, and the price (demand) of wood extracted. As will be seen later, companies operating illegally may also have to bribe officials for logging permits, pay off local vil- lage heads or “security” staff to threaten or drive away villag- ers and local indigenous people, and bribe police, military or customs officials.

The timber buyers for processing, whether in saw mills, pulp mills or board factories, will pay according to the spe- cies, quality, size and composition of the wood. The speci- fications depend on the purpose, use and processing of the wood. Any buyer for a wood corporation or mill will require detailed information on the wood purchased. Wood product prices are set according to manufacturing needs, market de- mands and costs of acquisition, which is typically a function of distance and transportation costs. There are sometimes premiums for certified timber, which offer additional oppor- tunities for fraud or forgery. The more valuable and exclu- sive the end-product is on the market, the more expensive the transport can be. A large mill will have large-scale fixed costs related to staff and production machinery. Hence, not only will processors need detailed knowledge on the type and quality of the wood they buy, they also need a consistent flow and supply of wood to their mills to avoid having a period of unused capacity in

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Causes of illegal logging The Indonesian model

Economic and political instability

Lack of democracy and transparency

C O R R U P T I O N A T H I G H E R S T A T E L E V E L

Patronage and favouritism

S Y S T E M F A I L U R E C O R R U P T I O N A T L O W E R S T A T E L E V E L

Monopolistic concession agreement

Corporation’s in uence on Government

Poor concessional agreement

Overcapacity

Natural scarcity rents

Inadequate rules, regulations and permits

ILLEGAL LOGGING

Ineciency and waste

Inadequate penalty system

Taxation regimes

Provision of resources at low prices

Poverty

Low quality of bureaucracy

Weak Government

Monitoring and enforcement capacity

Sources: Palmer, C. E.,The Extent and Causes of Illegal Logging: An Analysis of a Major Cause ofTropical Deforestation In Indonesia, CSERGE Working Paper.

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The end-users – consumers

processing. While some of this is buffered through storage capacity, they cannot afford to rely on one geographic source of timber. Most mills would prefer legal timber to illegal if the price was the same because of consumer demands. However, if illegal timber is mixed with legal either in the mills or during trans- port or can be obtained cross-border without fees or at lower costs, there is a high incentive for complicity in illegal log- ging due to potentially increased profit – and very low risk. In addition, under-reporting of turnover combined with over- invoicing provides ample opportunity for tax fraud. Project LEAF (Law Enforcement Assistance for Forests) is a climate initiative consortium on combating illegal logging and organized forest crime led by the INTERPOL Environmental Crime Programme and the United Nations Environment Pro- gramme’s (UNEP) centre in Norway, UNEP GRID Arendal. The project developed out of a unanimous resolution ratified at INTERPOL’s 79th General Assembly calling for INTERPOL to play a leading role in supporting international environmental enforcement efforts and discussions during INTERPOL’s 7th International Conference on Environmental Crime. Following presentations on the UN Collaborative climate change initiative on Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degra- dation (REDD and REDD+) INTERPOL stated its commitment to explore emerging environmental threats and deciding the best way forward on REDD mechanisms and forest protection. LEAF – Law Enforcement Assistance for Forests

Consumer awareness is highly variable. Unlike trade in some endangered wildlife or drugs, where consumers, in most cas- es, are aware of their complicity in crime, most consumers of wood products may not be informed or aware that the product they use – in furniture, panels, walls or computer paper – may have originating from illegal logging. Indeed, as many processing mills are located in countries other than where the timber is extracted, or traded on the market many times during transport, a piece of paper from an EU- complished through targeted operations based on criminal intelligence analysis. The ultimate aim is to stop the activi- ties of criminal gangs and groups driving illegal logging and the international trade in illegally harvested timber. The project’s specific objectives include: • Provide an overview and review of the extent, primary geographic locations, routes, causes and structure of net- works involved in illegal logging, corruption, fraud, laun- dering and smuggling of wood products. • Support countries in improving enforcement and combating illegal logging and deforestation, laundering of forest prod- ucts, fraud and illegal trade and smuggling in forest products. • Provide training and operational support at different scales. • Provide information and support on how organized crimi- nals organize, launder, bribe and trade logged forest prod- ucts illegally. • Identify and evaluate the most effective guidelines, struc- ture and best practices for combating illegal logging and deforestation for a full-fledged LEAF programme on law enforcement support beyond 2013. Preliminary estimates suggest that a full global law enforce- ment investigative capacity under INTERPOL, supporting, training and liaising with National Central Bureaus and na- tional anti-logging task forces including operational support in-country to reduce tax fraud, laundering and illegal log- ging, would cost US$20–30 million annually.

The feasibility project is financially supported by the Norwe- gian Agency for Development Cooperation (NORAD).

Objectives: Project LEAF will assist INTERPOL Member Countries in 2012–13 in building a structure and platform suitable for enforcing national laws governing forestry, and in meeting international commitments such as REDD and REDD+, and providing a coordinated, holistic, response to the crimes perpetrated by organized criminal gangs engaged in illegal logging and international timber trafficking. This will be ac-

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The International Consortium on Combating Wildlife Crime (ICCWC)

ICCWC is the collaborative effort by five inter-governmen- tal organizations, ICCWC comprises the CITES Secretariat, INTERPOL, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), the World Bank and the World Customs Orga- nization (WCO). The CITES Secretariat chairs the alliance, working to bring coordinated support to the national wild- life law enforcement agencies and to the sub-regional and regional networks that, on a daily basis, act in defence of natural resources. ‘Wildlife’, as defined by the consortium is not restricted to animals alone, but also incorporates endangered plants, il- legal logging and non-timber forest products, some of which are illegally traded at very significant levels. The mission of ICCWC is to usher in a new era where perpetra- tors of serious wildlife crimes will face a formidable and coor- dinated response, rather than the present situation where the risk of detection and punishment is all too low. In this context, ICCWC will mainly work for, and with, the wildlife law enforce- ment community, since it is frontline officers who eventually bring criminals engaged in wildlife crime to justice.  ICCWC seeks to support development of law enforcement that builds on socially and environmentally sustainable natural resource policies, taking into consideration the need to provide liveli- hood support to poor and marginalized rural communities. The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Spe- cies of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) is an international agreement between governments. Its aim is to ensure that international trade in specimens of wild animals and plants does not threaten their survival. The CITES Secretariat has been working since 1975 to help countries combat illegal cross-border trade in animals and plants. INTERPOL is the world’s largest international police orga- nization, with 190 member countries. Created in 1923, it fa- cilitates cross-border police cooperation, and supports and assists all organizations, authorities and services whose mission is to prevent or combat international crime. INTER-

POL’s General Secretariat has a programme devoted to com- bating environmental crime.

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) is a global leader in the fight against illicit drugs and in- ternational crime. Established in 1997 through a merger between the United Nations Drug Control Programme and the Centre for International Crime Prevention, UNODC op- erates in all regions of the world through an extensive net- work of field offices. The World Bank is a vital source of financial and technical assistance to developing countries around the world. Its mission is to fight poverty and to help people help them- selves and their environment by providing resources, shar- ing knowledge, building capacity and forging partnerships in the public and private sectors. The Bank supports a global program of technical assistance on anti-money launder- ing and has played a leading role in international efforts to strengthen forest law enforcement and governance. The World Customs Organization (WCO) is the only intergov- ernmental organization exclusively focused on Customs mat- ters. With its worldwide membership, the WCO is now rec- ognized as the voice of the global Customs community. It is particularly noted for its work in areas covering the development of global standards, the simplification and harmonization of customs procedure, the facilitation of international trade, trade supply chain security, the enhancement of Customs enforce- ment and compliance activities, anti-counterfeiting and piracy initiatives, public-private partnerships, integrity promotion, and sustainable global Customs capacity building programmes. ICCWC has recently developed a Wildlife and Forest Crime Analytic Toolkit, which is primarily designed to assist gov- ernment officials in wildlife and forestry administration, Cus- toms and other relevant enforcement agencies to conduct a comprehensive analysis of possible means and measures related to the protection and monitoring of wildlife and for- est products, and to identify technical assistance needs.

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based, US-based, Chinese or Japanese producer may actually have come from a conflict zone in Africa, an indigenous re- serve in Brazil or a UNESCO World Heritage orangutan habi- tat in Indonesia (UNEP 2007; 2011; UNEP-INTERPOL 2009). While there are some certification schemes available, like FSC, the majority of these certifications are located in Canada, the US and Europe (UNEP 2009; Schepers 2010). Furthermore, as will be demonstrated in this report, there are many ways wood can be laundered on its journey from the for- est to the consumer, making certification schemes nearly im- possible to implement effectively in many critical tropical de- forestation locations. Hence, while consumer awareness and demand is critical for putting pressure on manufacturers and the processing industry, illegal logging, financing of illegal log- ging or processing and laundering is a profitable transnational organized crime which requires an international law enforce- ment and investigative effort.

Like any other crime, organized illegal logging cannot be combated merely through voluntary trade schemes or alter- native income generation nor be prevented by short-lived police crack-downs. It requires the full breadth of incentives, reduced profitability and high risk. Only when the profit-risk ratio changes dramatically, and both alternative incomes and market incentives are in place can we expect illegal logging and deforestation to decline. While both trade incentives and economic support through FLEGT and REDD+ will become increasingly available, there must also be effective international law enforcement, train- ing and investigative capacities to cut criminal profits and increase the risk involved in illegal logging, wood-related tax fraud and laundering to bring about an overall decline in il- legal logging.

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There are now just five surviving Akuntsu. When they die, the tribe will become extinct. Their population was wiped out in the 1980s by illegal loggers and gunmen employed by ranchers. They now live in a tiny patch of forest surrounded by ranches.

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The Mashco-Piro in southeast Peru are being driven out of their forest home by illegal loggers and into the glare of tourists’ cameras.

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HowtheUN-REDDProgrammeSupports Country efforts onAnti-Corruption inREDD+

Corruption could undermine the effectiveness of REDD+ as a climate change mitigation instrument, because, with corruption, strategies to address the drivers of deforestation are likely to fail. It will reduce the efficiency with which emission reductions are achieved, as limited financial resources are lost to illegal activi- ties. It will also result in inequitable sharing of benefits, and could pose risks to the human rights of local communities and indig- enous stakeholders. Without effectiveness, efficiency and equity, the very sustainability of the REDD+ mechanism is at risk. REDD+ countries also need to respond to the United Nations FrameworkConventiononClimateChange‘s “CancunAgreements”, where they have committed to REDD+ countries to promoting and supporting “transparent and effective national forest governance structures”. Many countries also have commitments under relevant conventions such as United Nations Convention Against Corrup- tion (UNCAC) and other regional anti-corruption agreements. Pioneer work on anti-corruption in REDD+ could also potentially pave the way to promote transparency and accountability in oth- er climate finance mechanisms. How does the UN-REDD Programme support countries efforts on anti-corruption in REDD+? A range of different approaches can be supported to help prevent corruption, and these have been applied successfully in the forest and other sectors. Examples include approaches to enhance access to information, citizen demand for accountability, accountability and integrity of public officers, sound financial management sys- tems, protection of whistleblowers and the delivery of justice. Measures conducive to reducing corruption risks in REDD+ countries already exist in many instances linked to their broader governance efforts, such as stakeholder engagement. These ef- forts need to be strengthened based on thorough and participa- tory assessments, and by specific technical inputs to promote transparency and accountability in different elements of a na- tional REDD+ strategy, such as in the design and operation of national registries, national REDD+ funds and benefit distribu- tion systems. To this end the UN-REDD Programme provides:

Corruption is an important reason why illegal logging contin- ues to thrive in many parts of the world, and why environ- mental and socially damaging activities by mining, agriculture and timber companies operating in tropical forest regions are allowed to exist with impunity. In a number of countries en- gaged in the REDD+ (reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation in developing countries) mechanism, corruption has been, or continues to be, a pivotal factor in the political economy of forest use and deforestation1. In 2009 the UN-REDD Programme2 launched activities to help prevent corruption risks in REDD+. The work is focused on making the case for why preventing corruption risks is essential for REDD+ to work, providing advice on how this can be done, and working with partner countries engaged in anti-corruption work. UNDP’s Global Programme on Anti- Corruption for Development Effectiveness is a partner in these activities. Why is tackling corruption risks in REDD+ necessary? Corruption in REDD+ may happen during the design of a national REDD+ strategy: powerful actors may seek to in- fluence policies, through bribery, trafficking in influence and other corrupt means, in order to either skew the distribution of benefits in their favor, including through manipulating the design of land policies, or avoid having to alter their cur- rent practices, including illegal logging. Corruption risks in REDD+ could also take the form, during the implementation phase, of embezzlement of REDD+ benefits, and allowing laundering of REDD+ proceeds3. 1. U4, Corruption and REDD+: Identifying risks amid complexity, May 2012. 2. The UN-REDD Programme, a partnership of FAO, UNDP and UNEP, was launched in 2008. The Programme supports nationally-led REDD+ processes and promotes the informed and meaningful involvement of all stakeholders, including Indigenous Peoples and other forest-depen- dent communities, in national and international REDD+ implementa- tion. More at www.un-redd.org. 3. These risks are further detailed in Staying on Track: Tackling Corrup- tion risk in Climate Change, UNDP, 2010, http://tinyurl.com/Stayingon- Track-UNDP.

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• Funding, policy and technical support; • Knowledge dissemination through publications and work- shops; • Facilitation of in-country conversations between, for example, anti corruption agencies and national REDD+ teams; • Coordination and linkages with UNDP’s support to the imple- mentation of UNCAC and of national anti-corruption strategies;

• Coordination and linkages to other relevant areas of UN- REDD Programme support, such as participatory gover- nance assessments, engagement of stakeholders and in particular civil society and Indigenous Peoples, the right to Free, Prior and Informed Consent, national-level recourse mechanisms, legal preparedness, safeguards and safe- guards information systems.

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Ten ways to conduct illegal logging

Cattle ranching and soy production

Agricultural expansion by small-scale farmers

Logging with forged or re-used permits

Logging in con ict zones

Obtaining logging permits illegally

Ignore laws and regulations

Logging in excess of permit or concession quotas

Logging without regular concession

Unprotected area

Logging concession

Bribing local o cers and police

Use of violence to access and clear cut the area

Widening road corridors, mining or other felling without a permit

Establishing, expanding and cutting beyond plantation

Logging in protected areas

Protected area

Biofuel plantation

Report and declare false gures

Source: Personal communication with Christian Nellemann, UNEP/GRID-Arendal

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TEN WAYS TO CONDUCT ILLEGAL LOGGING

Illegal charcoal trade

Lake Edward

#1

LOGGING IN PROTECTED AREAS

Biundu

Many protected areas include an abundance of rare wood spe- cies in high demand for panels, floors and furniture. They may also hold some of the last remaining concentrations of high- density wood for charcoal. A 2007 UNEP-UNESCO report documented illegal logging in 37 of 41 protected areas in Indonesia, including large-scale deforestation of a UNESCO World Heritage site and an endan- gered orangutan habitat (UNEP-UNESCO 2007). Loggers, with armed guards, moved into parks and cut down the forests with unarmed rangers facing lethal risk, bribes or simply lack of re- sources to enforce the park boundaries (UNEP-UNESCO 2007). Other examples include cutting wood for charcoal in endangered mountain gorilla habitat in Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), where militias drive villagers into refugee camps, then profit from cutting and producing charcoal in the Virun- gas national parks and selling the high-demand charcoal to the camps (UNEP-INTERPOL 2010). Rangers in Virungas have been effective in protecting the gorilla population and saving it from extinction, and in implementing vehicle checkpoints and destroy- ing kilns for charcoal production, but at a great costs and high risks. More than 200 rangers have been killed in the last decade defending the park boundaries against a charcoal trade estimated at over US$28 million annually, and another US$4 million on road taxes on charcoal alone (UNEP-INTERPOL 2010). Other examples include driving out and killing indigenous peo- ples in reserves in the Amazon, Greater Congo Basin and South- east Asia, where outspoken leaders have been assassinated.

Bwindi Impenetrable National Park

DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO

UGANDA

Rutshuru

Mgahinga Gorilla National Park

Burungu

Virunga National Park

Kriolirwe

Kingi

Volcanoes National Park

Kibumba

Kibati

RWANDA

Goma

National Park Illegally deforested area between 2003 and 2006 Refugee camp Main charcoal trade

Lake Kivu

5 Km 0

Sources: UNSC, S/2008/773; Central African Regional Program for the Environment, 2007; ICCN.

and destinations Patrol checkpoint

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Illegal logging and the Congo con ict

Rwenzori National Park

Beni

Nitoyo

Opyenge

Kibale National Park

North Kivu

Biambwe

Luberu

UGANDA

Maiko National Park

Lake Edward

DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO

Virunga National Park

Biundu

National Park

Road

Bwindi Impenetrable Park

Deforestation

Biruwe

Monitored between 1990 and 2003 Reported between 2005 and 2010

Rutshuru

Masisi

Walikale

Mining

Coltan and cassiterite mine Gold mine

RWANDA

Goma

Con ict

Area cotrolled by rebels Area with strong rebel in uence Security related incidents against Humanitarian Organizations in 2009 and 2010

Kahuzi-Biega National Park

Lake Kivu

Kalehe

South Kivu

Sources: UNOCHA , series of maps ; The Woods Hole Research Center, UNFCCC-COP, Reducing Co 2 Emissions from Deforestation And Degradation in The Democratic Republic of Congo: A First Look, 2007; Institut Géographi- que National Congolaise; Global Witness, “Faced with a gun, what can you do?”, 2009; The Guardian press release; Institute for Environmental Security, interactive database, accessed in March 2012.

Bukavu

0 20 Km

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#2

#3

LOGGING WITHOUT PERMITS IN UNPROTECTED AREAS

ILLEGAL LOGGING IN CONFLICT ZONES

In many remote regions, or where corruption is widespread, ille- gal logging is done by armed guards or “security personnel”, who drive local villagers away from the area. From the 1960s to early 2000s, this was one of the most common methods of logging ille- gally, as there was little, public regulation or enforcement in rural areas. Local mayors, officials and police officers were threatened or more often bribed to turn a blind eye (Amacher et al . 2012). In many cases, this continues to happen in very remote areas or in conflict zones, where companies or militants hold local power (UNEP-UNESCO 2007; UNEP-INTERPOL 2009).

Illegal logging directly fuels many conflicts as timber is a resource available for conflict profiteers or to finance arms sales. This practice is carried out on the Laos-Cambodian border. Awareness campaigns by Global Witness helped close down border points in the DRC, Southern Sudan, Colombia, and Aceh, Indonesia, where the military was also involved in many illegal logging op- erations. Without public order, militant, guerillas or military units impose taxes on logging companies or charcoal producers, issue false export permits and control border points. They frequently demand removal of all vehicle check points and public patrolling of resource-rich areas as part of peace conditions following new land claims and offensives. On occasion, conflicting groups agree on non-combat zones to ensure mutual profit from extraction of natural resources, such as happened on the Laos-Vietnam-Cambo- dian border in recent decades, and in North and South Kivu, DRC. The timber trade is increasingly targeting rare luxury tree species which are protected under Cambodian law. In January and February 2004, armed groups operating in Kratie province of Cambodia have been illegally logging luxury tree species and exporting the timber to Vietnam through border passes in the Valoeu region. These activi- ties have been facilitated by documents provided by the Ministry of Commerce and the Forest Administration, which purport to authorise a series of luxury timber ex- ports, including a recent export of more than 1,000 m 3 of Kranhung wood, worth approximately $700,000. The operations allegedly involved former police chiefs in the region. To circumvent the logging ban, harvesting opera- tions were disguised under a variety of illegal permits, to meet the demands of the illicit cross-border wood trade with Thailand, Vietnam and Laos. Laundering of illegal timber under- mines forestry reform in Cambodia

Global Witness, Press release 20th February 2004

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