JAKARTA, Indonesia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Indonesian-based Asia Pulp & Paper Group (APP) is expanding internal auditing and certification mandates for its pulpwood suppliers as part of its commitment to achieve 100 percent Sustainable Forest Management (SFM) certification by the end of 2020.
APP has publicly stated three critical targets that are the foundation of its sustainable forest management program in Indonesia. Those include:
1) To source 100 percent of its pulpwood supply from sustainable plantation stock by the end of 2015;
2) To achieve the government of Indonesia’s SFM certification for APP’s pulpwood suppliers by the end of 2015; and
3) To have all exclusive pulpwood suppliers achieve the comprehensive and voluntary-based LEI (Indonesia Ecolabelling Institute) SFM certification standard by the end of 2020.
“We believe these goals are essential to APP’s commitment to support sustainable forest management programs in Indonesia, China and around the world. They provide a foundation that will assure stakeholders that APP is operating in full legal compliance and continuing to strive to be a global leader in responsible paper production,” said Aida Greenbury, Managing Director of APP Group. “The path to achieving those goals demands rigorous independent auditing of all APP operations as well as our pulpwood suppliers.”
While 100 percent of APP’s pulpwood supply is verified legal under Indonesian law, the company is going beyond compliance in establishing its certification goals.
“Today, less than 10 percent of the world’s forests are certified. Striving for 100 percent certification of all APP pulpwood plantations is a highly ambitious goal, but one we believe is attainable and essential to the future integrity of our sustainable forest management program,” Ms. Greenbury added.
By the end of 2015 the company will require its independent pulpwood suppliers to be certified under the Indonesian government’s Sustainable Production Forest Management (Pengelolaan Hutan Produksi Lestari/PHPL) standard. To date, more than 1.3 million hectares, or about 52 percent of the area managed by APP’s pulpwood suppliers, have been certified.
In that same time frame all APP mills will adopt the Government of Indonesia’s new chain of custody (CoC) certification program, which establishes strict new wood legality and verification systems (Sistem Verifikasi Legalitas Kayu/SVLK). The company began to roll out the standard in 2009, when APP piloted SVLK CoC certification with one of its mills and associated pulpwood suppliers. Rigorous CoC certification supports Indonesia’s efforts to ensure wood products exported from the country are legal.
In parallel with its commitment to achieve 100 percent pulpwood supply by the end of 2015 APP will require its suppliers to be evaluated against Timber Legality & Traceability Verification (TLTV) requirements. APP has adopted this additional assessment as a stepping stone to achieve full certification for its pulpwood suppliers.
For the Indonesian pulp and paper industry, sustainable forest management and conservation begins with strictly adhering to government of Indonesia spatial planning and plantation development regulations as well as Sustainable Forestry Management certification requirements. These standards define requirements for preserving High Conservation Value Forest, restrictions for development on peatland, and community engagement in the plantation development process.
Beyond Indonesian regulations and standards, APP will continue its support of and auditing toward meeting numerous other forest certification standards. Today, there are many Sustainable Forest Management and CoC certification standards for pulpwood, pulp and paper industries worldwide, such as globally recognized Program for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC).
“APP has a policy to embrace all credible certification standards which are relevant to and in support of Indonesia’s policies, law and regulations and we will always strive to meet the highest standards that are expected by our customers and partners worldwide. We will continue to apply standards and principles from other globally recognized certifications, including international TLTV, ecolabelling and PEFC,” Ms. Greenbury said.
To view photos related to this announcement, visit APP’s Flickr channel here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/asiapulppaper/sets/72157625988403751/.
Notes for Editor:
About APP
APP is brand umbrella for paper products manufactured by a number of mills in Indonesia, inter alia PT. Indah Kiat Pulp & Paper Tbk, PT. Pindo Deli Pulp and Paper Mills, PT. Pabrik Kertas Tjiwi Kimia Tbk, PT. Lontar Papyrus Pulp & Paper Industries, PT. Ekamas Fortuna and PT The Univenus. APP is headquartered in Indonesia and markets its products to over 120 countries. The majority of APP’s production facilities hold Chain-of-Custody certification from LEI and PEFC.
About TLTV
The Timber Legality & Traceability Verification (TLTV) Service developed by SGS provides independent verification that timber products have been legally produced and sold throughout the ‘chain of custody’. Under the ‘Legality of Production’ (LP) component of TLTV, SGS verifies the legal origin of forest products (Verification of Legal Origin (VLO)), and the legal compliance of a particular company’s forest operations, its timber processing activities, and its products (Verification of Legal Compliance (VLC)), against agreed criteria – the TLTV LP Standards.
The VLO Standard consists of 4 principles plus one CoC principle, while the TLTV-VLC Standard comprises another 4, in total 8 legality principles plus the CoC principle which are further subdivided into criteria and indicators. If a company opts for the stepwise approach, it can stay on the VLO stage for a maximum of 2 years - thereafter it must reach full TLTV-VLC status.
Source: www.sgs.com
About LEI
The Indonesian Ecolabelling Institute (LEI) is a constituent-based organization promoting sustainable forest management using certification standard to bridge social and environmental needs to meet market needs. As a constituent-based organization, LEI holds mandate from its four chambers of constituent, namely indigenous people and community forest chamber, business chamber, NGO chamber, and eminent persons’ chamber. In 2000, LEI became an accreditation body and a Chain of Custody certification system was adopted. Certification for community-based forest management and plantation forest was adopted in 2002 and 2003 respectively; while LEI’s phased approach to sustainable forest management certification was being developed and was finally launched in 2007.
Photos/Multimedia Gallery Available: http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/mmg.cgi?eid=6622231&lang=en
Contacts
Asia Pulp & Paper Group
Loren Mack, Public Relations Manager, Sustainability & Stakeholder Engagement, APP Indonesia
Mobile: +62-821-136-952-57
Fax: +62-21-316-2617
Loren_M_Mack@app.co.id
www.asiapulppaper.com
Here forests of acacia trees flourish on a production plantation in the Riau Provence of Indonesia. Natively grow in warm-temperate regions, the acacia seedlings are produced by local nurseries supported by APP. Then they are planted in legal production concession areas (Photo: Business Wire).
Here at the Indah Kiat pulp mill in Perawang, Sumatra, workers thoroughly inspect timber through a multi-point authorization process. Supply registration is an important part of APP's chain of custody including a 100% no illegal wood policy (Photo: Business Wire).
Here at the Indah Kiat pulp mill in Perawang, Sumatra, workers thoroughly inspect timber through a multi-point authorization process. Supply registration is an important part of APP's chain of custody including a 100% no illegal wood policy (Photo: Business Wire).
Here eucalyptus trees grow in a certified plantation area in Jambi, Indonesia. After five years the trees are ready to be harvested. The cultivated wood goes through an important multi-point inspection process which is part of APP's change of custody. Then the land is replanted within 30-60 days of harvest (Photo: Business Wire).
Here a worker cultivates acacia seedlings at a community cooperative nursery supported by APP. The acacia cooperative nursery is just one step in the plantation production process. The co-op nursery is a part of the Pemberdayaan Masyarakat program in the Mitra Bina PT. Arara Abadi concession located in the Riau Provence of Indonesia. Only the highest acacia seedlings are used which go through a rigorous quality inspection process before they are bought by APP suppliers. The money is then invested back into the nursery, which provides jobs for local villagers and economic opportunity for the region (Photo: Business Wire).
The WKS eucalyptus nursery is located in Sungai Tapa, part of the Jambi Provence in Indonesia. Workers at this eucalyptus nursery ship an average of 300,000 seedlings a day for planting. Only the best seedlings are selected for transplantation. Seedlings must meet quality criteria that include the number of leaves, stem diameter and height of the plant. If they do not meet the criteria, they are not selected for planting (Photo: Business Wire).