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Sustainable forest management ensures that wood production is carried out responsibly, promoting biodiversity conservation, ecosystem protection, and sustainable development. This process involves planned practices that balance forest resource use with environmental preservation and the well-being of local communities.
Main objectives of Sustainable Forest Management:
Controlled logging to prevent predatory deforestation
Protection of fauna and flora species within forest management areas
Implementation of practices that prevent ecosystem degradation
Promotion of jobs and sustainable economic development
Adoption of recognized regulations such as FSC® (Forest Stewardship Council) and PEFC
Sustainable forest management is essential to ensure that the wood used in industry comes from legal and environmentally responsible sources, reducing negative impacts and promoting a more balanced future for the planet.
Sustainable forest management is a carefully planned process that allows the responsible use of forest resources while ensuring their preservation for future generations.
Key steps:
Forest inventory
A detailed survey of tree species, timber volume, fauna, flora, and terrain characteristics is conducted. This step is essential to understand the forest’s potential.
Harvest planning
Determines which trees may be cut and how the extraction will take place, minimizing environmental impact. Access roads and protection zones are also planned.
Selective and controlled logging
Only authorized trees are cut, using techniques that avoid damage to the ecosystem, soil, and neighboring trees.
Monitoring and protection
Continuous monitoring ensures natural regeneration, fire prevention, pest control, and compliance with good practices.
Reforestation or natural regeneration
In some areas, new trees are planted; in others, natural regeneration is allowed to occur.
Involvement of local communities
Local populations are involved in the process, promoting employment, social development, and the value of traditional knowledge.
Environmental certification
Sustainable forest management can be certified by entities such as FSC® or PEFC, ensuring sustainable, legal, and socially responsible practices.
Sustainable forest management guarantees that wood is of legal, sustainable, and traceable origin, contributing to biodiversity protection and the fight against illegal deforestation.
Certified wood comes from forests managed in a sustainable, legal, and responsible manner, based on clearly defined environmental, social, and economic criteria. This wood is audited by recognized independent entities such as FSC® or PEFC.
Choosing certified wood is a way to support sustainable forest management, protect the environment, and ensure that the final product respects quality, legality, and social responsibility standards.
Certified wood comes from forests managed in a sustainable, legal, and responsible manner, based on clearly defined environmental, social, and economic criteria. This wood is audited by recognized independent entities such as FSC® or PEFC.
Ensuring wood legality helps combat illegal deforestation, protects natural resources, and promotes a more transparent, responsible, and sustainable forest sector.
Although wood from the Amazon is already subject to strict oversight by Brazilian environmental agencies (such as IBAMA and state agencies), multiple layers of environmental verification remain necessary. This is especially true for exports to international markets and compliance with laws and certifications that go beyond local requirements.
These additional layers bring credibility and prevent fraud, and it is essential that they occur through independent audits, ensuring impartiality, socio-environmental compliance, and competitive access to global markets.
The exploitation of Pau-Brasil dates back to colonial times, when this tree, native to Brazilian forests, was intensely harvested due to the high commercial value of its wood and the dye extracted from its heartwood, used in Europe.
The absence of sustainable forest management criteria and the pursuit of immediate profits led to the indiscriminate felling of millions of trees, nearly wiping out natural populations along the Brazilian coast. Combined with agricultural expansion and urbanization, this uncontrolled use drove the species to near extinction, highlighting the fragility of ecosystems and the importance of responsible forest exploitation policies.
Environmental Due Diligence is a process of detailed assessment and verification of the environmental impacts associated with the extraction, production and commercialization of wood. The goal is to identify environmental risks, ensure compliance with forest legislation and promote sustainable practices before any commercial transaction, investment or partnership.
In the timber sector, Environmental Due Diligence plays a key role in ensuring the legality and traceability of wood, helping to combat illegal deforestation and protect ecosystems.
Environmental Due Diligence is essential for a more sustainable forestry sector, minimizing environmental impacts and promoting responsible natural resource management.