Sign up for our Free email Newsletter
and get all the latest wildlife news!
Choose:

Timber firm could destroy endangered Amur tiger habitat

19/06/2011 13:10:03

Public outcry at plans

June 2011: The discovery of plans to log key Amur tiger habitat in a proposed UNESCO World Heritage Site has led to a public outcry demanding the cancellation of the logging lease in Russia's Primorsky Province.

JUST A FEW HUNDRED LEFT: The Amur tiger
Picture: WWF

WWF Russia has joined with the Association of Indigenous Peoples of Primorsky Province to lead the call to stop JSC Les Export, a wood harvesting and export company that specializes in parquet flooring, from advancing with the proposals.

Primorsky Province in the Russian Far East is one of the last remaining strongholds of the largest of all big cats, the Amur tiger, which numbers less than 500 in the wild.

Firm already has two leases
The protests followed Les Export's application for a timber lease in the Bikinsky Pine Nut Harvesting Zone in the Bikin River Basin, part of the largest intact tract of old-growth Korean pine-broadleaf forests in the world (407,300 hectares) and an extremely important habitat for Amur tigers.

But JSC Les Export had already drawn public ire after it gained approval for two forest leases in May 2011, also in Amur tiger habitat.

The two approved leases are in the Pozharsky Pine Nut Harvesting Zone, and the Sredneussuriskiy Provincial Wildlife Refuge, which make up the only ecological corridor connecting the Russian population of Amur tigers with a Chinese population across the border in China's Wandashan Mountains.

'This is a betrayal'
‘We regard this as betrayal,' said Yury Darman, Director of WWF Russia's Amur branch. ‘JSC Les Export previously agreed that it would not use timber from pine nut harvesting zones or protected areas.

‘JSC Les Export's actions go against the company's commitment to work towards certification under the Forest Stewardship Council, an independent organisation that promotes responsible management of the world's forests.

‘Furthermore, it is a betrayal of the native residents of Bikin - the Udegei and Nanai - whose lives completely depend on traditional use of the riches of this area,' said Darman.

‘These communities have been defending the Bikin from exploitation since 1992.'

Proposed UNESCO World Heritage Site
In November 2010, the Bikin River Basin was submitted as a candidate to become a UNESCO World Heritage Site on the initiative of the Russian Government.

‘This is our forest. We hunt here, fish here, gather medicinal plants here, harvest wood here for our personal needs,' said Igor Kukchenko Vice President of the Association of Indigenous Peoples of Primorsky Province. The inhabitants of our village, Krasniy Yar, have spoken out against the leasing of this forest tract by JSC Les Export and any other industrial logging in the Bikin,' he added.

 

Read the comments about this article and leave your own comment

No forests no tigers or anything else.

This would seem like another case of somebody or organisation being bribed to allow these leases to be granted. The JSC Les Export company should explain why they have done a complete u turn from what they previously announced they would not do.

Our world is heading for destruction caused by mankind. The companies involved in cutting down the worlds forests have no idea of what they are doing, they can only see the short term financial gains. Our whole worlds weather patterns are changing for the worst at any ever increasing speed, and our world leaders are doing nothing to change things for the better.

Posted by: colin guest | 26 Jun 2011 15:37:16

Amur tiger habitat

This is very bad news - there are so few tigers left of any kind that they can ill afford to lose more habitat. Is there no petition people can sign to demonstate thier anger at this firm?

Posted by: Andrea Polden | 24 Jun 2011 21:37:15

To post a comment you must be logged in.
CLICK HERE TO LOG IN AND POST A COMMENT

New user? Register here

 

Click join and we will email you with your password. You can then sign on and join the discussions right away.