Home > Nippon Paper Industries Aims for Forest Certification >
2003.09.27 Sat
Nippon Paper Industries Aims for Forest Certification
Nippon Paper Industries Co. in Japan has developed action guidelines that include the application of forest certification systems. The company aims to obtain forest certification for company-owned forests at home and abroad by 2008.

Nippon Paper Industries has promoted tree plantations overseas in order to secure sustainable forest resources. It also purchases raw materials from well-managed forests. International forest certification systems, which evaluate the practice of sustainable forest management by a third party, have been established in recent years, and so the company decided to draw up its action guidelines based on forest certification.

Although the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certification system is the best known in Japan, the company will adopt various certification systems that are appropriate to each of its forests. Also, the company would like to be accredited by the Sustainable Green Ecosystem Council (SGEC), established on June 3, 2003, for its forests in Japan.

In order to apply the concept of forest certification to its procurement of raw materials, the company will shift its total imports of hardwood chips to those supplied from certified forests or tree plantations by 2008, while taking other measures toward receiving certification for its own forests.


Posted: 2003/09/27 11:51:50 AM
Japanese version
| Posted by jfs |
NEXT ACTION
Search more news from JFS   
Read next article: New to Tokyo: Rooftop Buckwheat Farming
Read previous article: Environment Ministry Studying Wind Turbine Installation in National Parks
Support JFS
About JFS
RELATED NEWS

Temperatures at Higher Latitudes of Northern Hemisphere to Rise More than Predicted
Local Government Network on Biodiversity Inaugurated in Japan
Japan Sees Warmer and Dryer Summer in 2011
'Green Curtain' Outside Chiba City Hall Helps Reduce Indoor Temperature
Three Japanese Companies Team Up to Remove Salt from Tsunami-Hit Farmland


Don't worry! Everything here is environment-friendly...
Two Municipal Governments Decide on Metropolitan Cap-and-Trade Cooperation Details
Preferential Tax Treatment of Donations Expanded for Certified NPOs
Non-recycle-oriented society
Kyoto City to Experiment with Eco-Money Points for Eco-Activities

Creative Commons