bwi keynote speech 2015

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8/20/2019 BWI Keynote Speech 2015 http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/bwi-keynote-speech-2015 1/4 Opening Remarks, Ambet Yuson – BWI PEFC General Assembly Opening Remarks, Ambet Yuson - BWI PEFC GENERAL ASSEMBLY Montreux, 10 December 2015  As General Secretary of BWI, the world’s largest global union federation of forest, wood, and construction workers, it is an honour to address your assembly. Since the beginning, BWI has been a proud partner with PEFC. As the focal point for  Agenda 21 forest workers within the UN structure and as the representative for 15 million workers who depend on Sustainable Forest Management and Sustainable Forest products for their livelihoods, I congratulate you for what you have achieved / and for what lies ahead.  As to the future, there appears to be the beginning of an international consensus. It can be seen in terms of how quickly the nations of the world accepted the Sustainable Development goals. It can be seen in the commonality of the public pronouncements / of both the Islamic and Catholic religions, / and of course it can be seen at the discussions at Climate Change Conference in Paris. Let’s first look at the basic concepts of this consensus / and then the challenges and opportunities it presents for forests / and those who manage and live in them. The emerging consensus has five parts. They are:  1st Environmental degradation is the result of social degradation  2nd Global wealth cannot continue to be concentrated in a few nations or among a few elites  3rd The world’s poor are not poor because they are lacking, / but rather because the world’s rich are able to convert their wealth into power to preserve their status quo  4th There are real limits to economic growth,  and 5th Market cannot by themselves deliver sustainable development Each one of these five statements holds an endless range of policy options and ramifications for how forests are managed. Once the conversation becomes sophisticated enough to start combining the five areas, / we reach an infinite number of options very quickly. Let me address just a few points. The drivers for environmental destruction are social. Some are economic: greed, subsistence, poverty, unemployment, war, the current imbalance of power between

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Page 1: BWI Keynote Speech 2015

8/20/2019 BWI Keynote Speech 2015

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/bwi-keynote-speech-2015 1/4

Opening Remarks, Ambet Yuson – BWI PEFC General Assembly

Opening Remarks, Ambet Yuson - BWI

PEFC GENERAL ASSEMBLY

Montreux, 10 December 2015

 As General Secretary of BWI, the world’s largest global union federation of forest, wood,

and construction workers, it is an honour to address your assembly.

Since the beginning, BWI has been a proud partner with PEFC. As the focal point for

 Agenda 21 forest workers within the UN structure and as the representative for 15

million workers who depend on Sustainable Forest Management and Sustainable Forest

products for their livelihoods, I congratulate you for what you have achieved / and for

what lies ahead.

 As to the future, there appears to be the beginning of an international consensus. It can

be seen in terms of how quickly the nations of the world accepted the Sustainable

Development goals. It can be seen in the commonality of the public pronouncements / of

both the Islamic and Catholic religions, / and of course it can be seen at the discussions

at Climate Change Conference in Paris.

Let’s first look at the basic concepts of this consensus / and then the challenges and

opportunities it presents for forests / and those who manage and live in them. The

emerging consensus has five parts. They are:

  1st Environmental degradation is the result of social degradation

  2nd Global wealth cannot continue to be concentrated in a few nations or among

a few elites

  3rd The world’s poor are not poor because they are lacking, / but rather because

the world’s rich are able to convert their wealth into power to preserve their status

quo

  4th There are real limits to economic growth,

  and 5th Market cannot by themselves deliver sustainable development

Each one of these five statements holds an endless range of policy options and

ramifications for how forests are managed. Once the conversation becomes

sophisticated enough to start combining the five areas, / we reach an infinite number of

options very quickly. Let me address just a few points.

The drivers for environmental destruction are social. Some are economic: greed,

subsistence, poverty, unemployment, war, the current imbalance of power between

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Opening Remarks, Ambet Yuson – BWI PEFC General Assembly

urban and rural; and global north and south. Seeking to find purely environmental policy

solutions / have failed and will continue to fail because they are not addressing the root

cause of the crisis. This also helps to understand / why technical solutions have beenrelatively ineffective; / they tend to ignore the social component.

The Islamic Declaration on Climate Change calls on all:

  To set in motion a fresh model of wellbeing, / based on an alternative to the

financial model which depletes resources, / degrades the environment, / and

deepens inequality.

The Catholic Church clarified the relationship with its statement:

  We have to realise that a true ecological approach always becomes a socialapproach; it must integrate questions of justice in debates on the environment, so

as to hear both the cry of the earth and the cry of the poor.

When the world’s two largest religions agree and point to the need - to address social

 justice issues as a precursor to environmental issues perhaps we should all take note.

Poverty and inequality stand first in line / as prime drivers of deforestation and forest

degradation. This is true in rural areas of OECD countries / as it is in the poorest high-

forest-cover countries in the world. The actions and consequences of how forest-

dependent populations and forests suffer - may differ / but the drivers are universal.

Your next round of standards must recognise this / and put in place frameworks to help

change this. This means, finding ways to audit social standards that are both effective

and inexpensive. A forest products company that pays it’s CEO 200 or 300 times / what

it pays its workers is not sustainable. Logs processed in the most dangerous sawmill in

the world / cannot produce forest products that carry anyone’s logo of sustainability.

We are currently in a struggle with FSC / because of their refusal to enforce the

minimum labor standards that make up the world’s consensus — the ILO core labor

standards. For more than a year, FSC has and continues to certify forest products from

Fiji Pine / even after the military junta that rules the country — sanctioned the disbanding

of all unions in this sector; / and permitted the abrogation of all collective bargained

agreements by the company. Even FSC must recognise that abusing and using up

human-resource / is as wrong as abusing natural-resources.

There is an obvious problem with the myth of continuous economic growth in a climate-

constrained environment. There simply isn’t enough “stuff” in the world — to provide

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Opening Remarks, Ambet Yuson – BWI PEFC General Assembly

every consumer a lifestyle / anywhere near the lifestyle of a handful of OECD countries.

We have known this for more than 3 decades, / yet no one is willing to acknowledge that

there are limits.

In any given year, billions of dollars are transferred from the global south to the global

north / in the form of international trade. As challenging as these numbers are to those

who still believe / that foreign direct investment can create and promote human

development in the global south, / the situation is still worse. It is worse because these

numbers do not account for the social and environmental disruption of urbanisation,/

reduction in local agricultural prices and availability, / and the depletion of the global

south’s resources / as its forests are converted to palm oil plantations or its native forest

products sector is displaced by MNC joint ventures funded by OECD money.

Based on any definition of industrial development, the world has seen the development

of the global south. Today 79% of all industrial workers reside in the global south, / yet

food insecurity, poverty, and foregone human development remains almost unabated.

In fact, as the global south has been industrialising, deforesting, and adding to its

contribution of green gasses, / it’s share of global wealth has been decreasing. The 48

least developed countries — now have a lower share of annual per capital GDP of the

G7 / than they did 40 years ago. Likewise the same trend holds for all developing

countries relative to the G7.

The global north using up precious materials and resources in the global south / cannot

go on forever. As forest landowners and participants of the forest products-value-chain,

you know as well as I / that there are finite limits to growth. You also experience the

reality that wealth in the global forest-supply-chain tends to reside at the top. This

characteristic is a major driver for unsustainable actions. Simply doing more of the

same, / promoting more production of consumer goods for global northern-fashion and

consumerism / is a path to social and environmental catastrophe.

The last component of the emerging global consensus is that — market-based actionscannot deliver sustainable development. Market-based solutions cannot keep the earth’s

temperature below 2 degrees. More likely, markets are part of the problem not the

solution. However, with strict government guidance, with clear limits on growth and the

size and power / accruing to the private sector, markets can be one tool to help realign

our economy / to a more circular and sustainable approach. However, it is important to

remember that those who are benefiting disproportionally from the current distribution of

power and money / will fight to maintain their status even at the expense of the planet.

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Opening Remarks, Ambet Yuson – BWI PEFC General Assembly

My question for you as members and stakeholders of PEFC is: what are you willing to

do to fight for / not only sustainable forest but for sustainable development?

Your founders created a system designed to be an advocate and fighter to defend your

members. My organisation, BWI was created for the same purpose. Today what

threatens my 15 million members, I think also threatens your members.

 As you commence your next set of standard setting/, please keep in mind / that forestry

practices and forestry production that promotes rural poverty isn’t sustainable. Workers

who can’t afford to buy the products they make / or who face food insecurity / are not in

a sustainable situation. I know that your comfort zone is more often / dealing with the

forests rather than the forest-dependent-populations / but as Pope Francis stated — 

social degradation is the root cause of environmental degradation. Until forest

dependent populations including workers / have a voice, / have a stake, / do not merely

survive but thrive within healthy rural communities, / you will never stop deforestation,

conversions and illegal logging. Until you become a strong voice for socially sustainable

forestry, / you will not win for your members what they want most — that is to be left

alone to manage their family forests or public forests without political intervention.

I believe that there is a common rural culture that transcends national boundaries and

political issues. I think there is a wide range of areas where we share common goals. I

look forward with the greatest anticipation to have my organisation work with PEFC, and

to have our members get to know your members in the local communities.

Together / we could be a formidable force for social and environmental justice. Our

combined voice would not only be heard in Brussels and Washington / but also in Kuala

Lumpur, Jakarta, Buenos Aires, Johannesburg and many other places.

BWI trade union movement is ready to expand our partnership if you are, the choice is

yours.

I would like to end my remarks with a personal note to my good friend Bill Street. Many

of you know Bill for his tenacity, commitment, and incredible energy. But I know Bill as a

kindred spirit who has been with me in my early stages in the global trade union

movement. I know Bill as someone who is able to build partnerships amongst the

oddest mixed group of people. I know Bill as someone who I can sit till the wee hours of

the night to discuss and strategise about forest certification, climate change, how to

improve workers lives. To BWI, Bill's is known for this quote -- “Wood is Good”. Bill,

indeed “Wood is Good” but today, you are the best. Bill, my friend, I salute you.