The Effects of Illegal Logging


Illegal logging negatively impacts the economic and ecological systems of optimal forest management. According to the text of the 1998 G-8 meeting held in Birmingham on forest management, "illegal logging robs national and subnational governments, forest owners and local communities of significant revenues and benefits, damages forest ecosystems, distorts timber markets and forest resource assessments and acts as a disincentive to sustainable forest management. International trade in illegally harvested timber including transfer pricing, under invoicing and other illegal practices, exacerbates the problem of illegal logging." The magnitude of illegal logging is significant. Research indicates that over 70 per cent of timber processed in Indonesia comes from illegal sources.(more information).

Photo copyright Faith Doherty/Environmental Investigation Agency
Log rafts on Bulah Besar river, Tanjung Puting, May 2000
Photo © Faith Doherty/Environmental Investigation Agency

Photo copyright Environmental Investigation Agency
Illegal Logging in Tanjung Puting National Park
Photo © Environmental Investigation Agency

Photo copyright Campbell Plowden/Environmental Investigation Agency
Slash and burn farming near Gunung Leuser Nat Park. 1995
Photo © Campbell Plowden/Environmental Investigation Agency





Become Wallis' Foster Parent

Your Price: $75.00

Click Here

Copyright ©2007 Orangutan Foundation International. All rights reserved.
For further details on any of the programs and projects presented within or just for more information please contact
Telephone: 800-ORANGUTAN in US or +1 (323) 938-6046; Fax: +1 (323) 938-6047
Write: OFI, 4201 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 407, Los Angeles, CA 90010, USA

Site Powered by