A West Coast forest advocacy group is renewing greenwashing claims against the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) in a new filing with the Federal Trade Commission.
ForestEthics‘ 22-page complaint alleges that SFI has violated revised FTC “Green Guides,” which are designed to ensure that manufacturers are truthful when they claim their products are green.
ForestEthics says that SFI is supported by the timber and paper industry and that it permits forestry practices that harm wildlife, pollute water, and allow the use of toxic herbicides and fertilizers.
“The Sustainable Forestry Initiative label is the timber industry’s cynical effort to get a piece of the highly valuable green marketplace in the U.S., which is currently valued at $500 billion annually,” Aaron Sanger of ForestEthics said in a prepared statement. “We have demonstrable proof that in many regions of the U.S. and Canada, SFI offers virtually no environmental protection beyond that already required by state and federal laws and worse, it offers cover and false marketing for companies trying to take advantage of consumers’ best intentions.”
The complaint was filed May 29 by the Washington Forest Law Center on behalf of both ForestEthics and Greenpeace.
Dispute goes back to 2009
ForestEthics first filed a complaint against SFI four years ago. Federal regulators took no action then, and SFI says that the new complaint amounts to “recycling” the tactic used at the time.
“ForestEthics is a campaign group,” Monique Hanis, SFI’s chief operating officer and vice president for marketing and communications, said in a telephone interview. “Its purpose is to attack our organization. This is all about market share. Their object is to provide misinformation and to promote the [Forest Stewardship Council], our competition.
“We have the opinion that there’s room for both and that we should all just be focused on trying to certify more forest land and continue to improve best practices for sustainable forestry.”
Hanis said that SFI is governed by a board that represents three sectors equally: environmental, social, and economic.
“SFI is committed to complying with the FTC Green Guides on environmental labeling and advertising,” she said.
Hanis added that SFI is about to start a review of its standards. “We invite ForestEthics and any other organizations that have concerns about our standards or our program to participate in this.”
No lawsuit for now
In announcing its new complaint, ForestEthics said that it had received a “cease and desist” letter from SFI in April, which amounted to a “threat to sue.”
Hanis said a letter asking ForestEthics to “stop using misleading information and incorrect facts about our program” was sent. When asked whether SFI had plans to file suit, she said, “No, not at this time.”
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