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Regulation Stepping Up

Regulation Stepping Up
Credit: brooks timber
Laurel Brunner

Laurel Brunner started her career in 1978 as an accountant for a printing company. Since then she has worked exclusively in the prepress and publishing industries, with a particular specialisation in prepress production and digital technologies. She is managing director of Digital Dots, an international consulting group, and publisher of Spindrift, an independent, subscriber supported newsletter for the graphic arts, printing and publishing industries.

Laurel Brunner is active in standards development through her work with ISO committes and is the convenor of ISO's task force looking at carbon footprinting standards for print media products. She provides private consulting and editorial services to a wide cross section of publishers and industry associations. Her work regularly appears in newspapers and magazines around the world, and Laurel is a regular speaker at industry conferences in Europe, the United States and Asia.

Written by  4th March 2013

On the 3rd March the European Timber Regulations (EUTR) come into force. Placing illegal timber or timber products into European Union markets will be a criminal offence.

EUTR will effect paper providers worldwide, because placing illegal timber or timber products into European Union markets will be a criminal offence. Any organisation that might be affected by the EUTR must put in place procedures that guarantee the legal sourcing of the timber products they trade, including paper and board which may account for around 50% of the world’s timber production.

The EUTR’s requirements have been broadly welcomed by print buyers who want to reduce their environmental impact. International companies who want to be sure that raw materials come from legal sources can now rely on an internationally relevant law that ensures verification. The law is widely expected to level the playing field for wood based products, making compliance a technical rather than an ethical choice. This is both a good and a bad thing. Good in that environmental laws are coming into being and bad for the same reason: we would prefer to see the graphic arts and printing industry regulate themselves.

Participants in the pulp and paper supply chain must now decide what they should be doing to mitigate risks that raw materials destined for European markets, might come from illegal sources. So the entire supply chain has a burden of responsibility, but that responsibility is a cooperative one. The cooperative includes any company involved in the supply of paper based products that wants to do business in Europe.

Verification that companies comply with EUTR will generally come from a recognised monitoring organisation. This is generally a national body with jurisdiction in a specific country. They will be interested not just in whether timber products are legally sourced, but also that operators have a robust due diligence system in place to make sure that illegal paper and board products cannot reach the European market. This is an important part of the EUTR. Traders should be able to identify supplier links throughout their supply chains and also be able to share information across those links.

From an environmental perspective the EUTR is a positive step, however for printing companies supplying services for European customers it requires compliance which might not be straightforward. The EUTR does provide an answer to the egegrious abuse of the world’s forests. But it is also an example of how regulation eventually comes to industrial sectors that do not take care of their environmental responsibilities on their own.

EUTR Leaflet

You can read the pdf for the applicable EUTR requirements here. pdfEUTR Leaflet in English.pdf


 

 

 

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