Oye Adedoyin, the Deputy Director of Forestry, Federal Ministry of
Environment, revealed this on Monday in Ondo State at a Federal Department of
Forestry-sponsored workshop – ‘Survey and Study on Timber: Flows to identify
the extent of illegal logging in Nigeria’.
According to him, timber products from countries that have not
signed the Voluntary Partnership Agreement laid down by EU are considered
“illegally sourced products”.
He said since Nigeria had yet to sign the agreement, its timber
products would be shut out of the European markets as from that date.
“The Voluntary Partnership Agreement is an international
instrument laid down by the EU,” he said. “Countries that have not signed the
agreement by March 2013 would not have their wood in EU markets.
Currently, Nigeria has not done that, and this has very grave
consequences on our forest products. So that is a very critical aspect of this
workshop which aims at sensitising government to do the right thing in this
direction. The essence of the workshop is to sensitise those of us exploiting
the forest that our products would cease to have markets in the EU if
government failed to do the right thing in this direction.”
The deputy director identified corruption and the prevailing
“illegalities” in the nation’s forestry sector as the major obstacles holding
Nigeria from signing the EU Voluntary Partnership Agreement.
“We are aware that a lot of illegality is going on in the nation’s
forestry sector in terms of mode of harvesting,” he said. “Any wood that is not
legally harvested would not find their way to international markets. That is a
major constraint and we want to discuss and resolve all these issues here so
that Nigeria will be in a position to key in to this all important agreement.”
He however disclosed that the EU provided funds lodged with the
Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) to assist countries to be able to key
in to this agreement.
The deputy director said that Nigeria had benefited from the EU
fund through a study to document illegal logging in the country.
He explained that the fund was still available to the federal and
state governments “if they want to access it”.
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