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FWCA lodges complaint with Press Council about timber story

Justin Law managing director FWCA

Forest & Wood Communities Australia has lodged a complaint with the Australian Press Council following a story on the timber industry published in The Monthly. It has also complained directly to the editor and provided a detailed critique to outline dozens of issues with the work by Paddy Manning. Source: Timberbiz

Vicforests has also registered its disappointment with the article entitled ‘Coup de grâce’ which it claimed contained a number of false and unfair claims.

The critique is central in a submission to media regulator the Australian Press Council to complain about the standards of objective journalism which the FWCA believes the article has breached.

It also accompanied a letter to the editor at The Monthly in which the FWCA asked that action be taken.

“It would have been easy to ignore the ‘essay’ given how few people appear to be aware of it, but the more we leave these unjustified attacks unanswered, the more traction they get,” said FWCA Managing Director Justin Law.

“If they did, they would report the immense amount of work and cost that goes into restoring the forests and adhering to the precautionary principles laid out under environmental law.

“They would highlight the efforts that go into minimising the risk of harm to native fauna in supplying natural timber products, or that just four trees in 10,000 are harvested and regenerated in scattered areas to reduce environmental impacts on the whole forest estate.

“They would also point out the alternatives to wood sourced from heavily regulated, world-certified Australian forests are plastic, concrete or timber imported from countries where there is genuine concern for forest health,” Mr Law said.

“Instead, all they are doing with these biased attacks is further damaging the credibility of objective journalism and ecological science.

“Perhaps it’s time these media crusaders surprised us all by examining corporate activism and its exploitation of dubious environmental issues to peddle outrage and dupe gullible Australians into funding their multi-million-dollar operations. That would be a story in the public interest,” he said.