National forest code wins environmental award
FOREST OWNERS ASSOCIATION
STORY & PHOTO
15 October
2009
National forest code wins
environmental award
An environmental code that
includes compulsory rules and best practice guidelines that
members of the Forest Owners Association must observe in
their day-to-day forestry operations has won a prestigious
national award.
The Resource Management Law
Association presented their 2009 award for the most
outstanding resource management documentation to the Forest
Owners environmental chair, Peter Weir, at their annual
conference in Wellington earlier this month.
The
Environmental Code which was published in 2007 has been
adopted by most major forest owners and their contractors
and endorsed by the NZ Farm Forestry Association.
A
recent survey showed that more than 90 per cent of
contractors involved in silviculture, harvesting, roading
and earthworks, and agrichemical and fertiliser application,
have adopted the Code. The association now plans to
develop a system of auditing compliance with the Code, which
is expected to form the basis of a planned National
Environmental Standard under the RMA.
“Nearly 20
years ago NZ’s plantation forest industry decided that it
needed to take ownership of its environmental performance.
While well managed plantations offer major environmental
benefits, forest operations take place in all weathers, on
difficult terrain, in remote areas, often with heavy
machinery and in potentially environmentally sensitive
areas,” Mr Weir says.
“It was clear to us that
we had to develop systems that were practical, effective and
had the buy-in of our members. Some Regional Councils were
imposing urban subdivision earthworks guidelines on us, but
these are often inappropriate for a forest setting and out
of step with international forest engineering best
practice. If we didn’t set our own rules then we were
looking at having even more regulations imposed on us by
some Councils.
“We knew that we were on the right
track when Fish and Game praised the development of our
Code, with its compulsory and enforceable rules, and then
encouraged other primary industries to take similar
ownership of their environmental performance. Finding better
ways to do things is far more productive and rewarding than
fighting the legitimate concerns of the
public.”
The 2007 Code is the most recent step in
the forest industry’s journey to audited self-regulation
and management. Based on an earlier code published in 1990
and three years of member consultation, it defines best
environmental practices (BEPs) for forest
operations.
“Some leading regional councils have
signalled that they will remove the need for forest owners
to get consents for forest operations where they can
demonstrate audited compliance with the Code. Hopefully
this will apply nationally with the adoption of a proposed
NES for plantation forestry,” Mr Weir says.
Mr
Weir thanks the Code’s many authors, making special
acknowledgement of the important roles played by Chayne
Zinsli and Kit Richards. He also thanked Brett Gilmore and
Pan Pac Forests for allowing the company’s environmental
management system to be used as a template for the
Code.
Photo caption: Peter Weir, the Forest
Owners environment chair, with the award for the forestry
industry's "outstanding" Environmental Code of
Practice
ends