It's Europe's lungs and home to many rare species. But to Russia it's
£100bn of wood

Sale of forests to private loggers could create ecological crisis

Nick Paton Walsh in Moscow
Friday September 19, 2003
The Guardian

A plan by the Kremlin which would allow Moscow to sell off the 843m
hectares of Russia's forests to private logging companies has raised fears
of an ecological disaster.

Forest makes up 70% of Russia's territory and spans 12 time zones. It is
known as Europe's lungs and is second only to the Amazon in the amount of
carbon dioxide it absorbs, and is home to many rare species.

On Wednesday the Kremlin decided to review the law on state ownership of
Russia's forests, currently under the management of the ministry of
natural resources, so they could be bought up by private companies. The
estimated value of the land at private sale has been put at $164bn
(£106.5bn). Yet environmentalists fear that the cost of its destruction to
the planet, and air quality in Europe, may be far higher.

Andrei Ptichnikov, forest coordinator of the World Wildlife Fund, Russia,
said: "Russia has 22% of the forest on earth - a very important part of
climate stability and global biodiversity because of all the rare species
that live there. According to some estimates, Russian forests absorb 15%
of the world's carbon dioxide or carbon monoxide. It provides a huge
amount of oxygen for not just Europe, but the world."

A new draft of the forest code - a part of Russian law notorious among
bureaucrats and ecologists for being as dense and impenetrable as the
forest it governs - focuses on selling off the forest to private
companies. At present, private firms can lease some of the land from the
government for up to 49 years. The Kremlin heavily regulates its use.

The new law however gives any private company the chance to buy the forest
land outright, or to have use of it for up to 99 years and then buy it.
The government hopes it will be approved by parliament by November 1.

A spokesman for Alexander Belyakov, head of the parliamentary committee on
natural resources, which has to approve and refine the new law, insisted
that if the forest is used properly, it should grow back to 80% its
previous size.

In order to get the legislation through before December's parliamentary
elections, they intend to amend the last law, rather than push through a
new one.

He added that the law is being carefully scrutinised to ensure the state
does not lose out if oil or other natural resources are found beneath the
soil after the land is sold off.

But Mr Ptichnikov said that, while the forest code was in parts positive
because it extended the lease period for compa nies to 99 years, forcing
companies to take a greater interest in the sustainability of their plot
of forest, it also allowed the sale of land to private construction
companies to build housing. "There is a lot of concern that this may
affect the forest around big cities," he said.

He added that the new forest code did not "really provide a strategic way
to ensure sustainable forest management. It has a lot of Soviet-era
features. The same state officials are responsible for the commercial use
of the forest as well as looking after it ecologically. Obviously, they
will be inclined to spend more time on the profitable commercial issues.
The new law provides a logging plan that is theoretically enough to ensure
sustainability. But in reality, it is hard to get it to work well because
there is not enough funding [to police the law]."

In Russia, logged wood sells for $1 (65p) a cubic metre, whereas it sells
for $30 in Finland and $15 in Estonia. "Prices are cheaper, but there is
also less money to keep the forest going," he said. "It is difficult to
see how that can change. Forest companies do not want their prices to go
up."

Alexei Morozov, from Greenpeace Russia, said: "The law's effect depends on
the regulations that govern logging. The basic regulations for the last
1997 draft of the code have only just been put into practice now. State
ownership means the local government and population can negotiate over how
to log some areas and protect others. Private ownership means businessmen
can suit their own agenda."

The Russian government has complained that, while Russia has nearly a
quarter of the world's forests, it exports a quarter as much wood as
Finland or Sweden. Critics will say the government is keen to ensure it
profits from the exploitation of the forest, rather than illegal loggers.

Timber contraband already represents a large problem in the region, with
Russia losing $30bn (£19.5bn) a year from the illegal trade in wood with
China and Japan, according to a report by the World Wildlife Fund last
year. Legal exports accounted for only $4.15bn in 2001, they added,
calling for stricter state control.

The potential levelling of vast swaths of the Siberian forest could also
threaten the existence of several endangered species. The far eastern
leopard, of which there are only 30 left, the Siberian tiger, of which 400
remain, would all suffer from widespread logging. Rare trees such as the
Siberian cedar pine and Korean cedar pine are also threatened in Russia's
far east, and the wild chestnut, already being illegally logged in the
Caucasus, is also at risk.

The big sell-off

Oil, gas and aluminium During the mid-90s, the Yeltsin government accepted
a proposal by businessmen to "manage" the state utilities and natural
resource companies, in exchange for a "loan" to the government. This gave
half a dozen men control over companies like Gazprom, which owns 30% of
the world's natural gas, and oil giants Yukos and Lukoil. The finance,
coupled with the media outlets these oligarchs owned, helped sway the 1996
elections in Boris Yeltsin's favour

Land The 2002 land code permits sale of land on which factories sit and of
private plots, previously prohibited. Yet the sale of farmland remains
prohibited, and tenants have to go through a complicated procedure to
change how the land may officially be used

Airlines Aeroflot was turned into a private company by Valeri Okoluv, Mr
Yeltsin's son-in-law, with help from the Kremlin kingmaker at the time -
now receiving political asylum in London - Boris Berezovsky


====================================
To this day, no one has come up with a set of rules for
originality. There aren't any. [Les Paul]

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