Tag Archives: alternative
Avacade Shares Socially Responsible Investment Trends
Taylor Scott International Continue reading
Thailand’s “Finest” Oud Oil receives International Approval
The sustainable Oud oil currently being produced by Asia Plantation Capital (APC) in their modern artisan distilleries has recently achieved approval by IFRA (The International Fragrance Association) for use in the production of fine fragrances. APC’s Oud is one of the few sustainably produced oud oils to achieve this standard and probably the only plantation produced oil to have approval. The state of the art distilleries used to create this organic Oud oil have all been designed to utilise the best aspects of the traditional artisan techniques with the benefit of state of the art control and consistency to safeguard high quality standards. Testing was carried out by ABP Australia, an industry expert with 30 years experience in evaluating essential oils. ABP is equipped with a purpose built, state-of-the-art laboratory, staffed by industry experts dedicated to identifying the world’s most pure and unadulterated oils. IFRA is a voluntary trade body whose members commit to provide products that are safe for use by the consumer and to the environment. Jonnie Swarbrick, Creative Director of the fragrance brand Du Bois, explains what this means “basically all essential oils and other ingredients used as part of the composition in fragrances have to be tested and approved as safe to use. IFRA members have a particularly robust testing level including skin sensitivity tests and chemical analyses. They can only use raw materials and oils reaching these high IFRA standards.” This newly achieved standard adds to the existing export approval APC has obtained from CITES (International Convention for the Trade in Endangered Species) for the supply and international distribution of its Oud oils produced from the endangered agarwood tree which APC has successfully reintegrated in Sri Lanka and Thailand as a viable sustainable plantation project. The harvesting and production of Oud oil from the endangered wild aquilaria trees has been banned by CITES since 2000. The movement and sale of all agarwood products from these trees is governed by CITES certificates which consequently confirm the origins as sustainable. In fact APC additionally undertake to replant two plantation trees for every one harvested, Jonnie Swarbrick believes that “as far as I know APC is the only plantation company to guarantee both CITES and IFRA certification on organic Oud oils”. APC supply Oud oil to many international fragrances and recognisable high street brands. Additionally they have a close relationship with Fragrance Du Bois who exclusively use APC’s Oud for their bespoke and personalised fragrances, a brand and concept that is presently taking Asia by storm; one of the fastest growing private fragrance brands in the region. Undiluted Oud oils are also supplied by APC throughout the Middle East where it is recognised and valued as premium sustainable oil. Traditionally used in Arabic culture for centuries, the continued supply and use has long been taken for granted but is now wholly relying on sustainable plantations and pioneering companies such as Asia Plantation Capital. Continue reading
Forestry And The Farm Bill
TUE JULY 23, 2013 Forestry and the Farm Bill By JULIA ALTEMUS As the U.S. House and Senate inched towards a Conference Committee on the farm bill last week, some believe the failure of Congress to pass a farm bill in 2012 (instead passing a nine-month extension), and the current stalemate, illustrates how impotent this policy has become. Some believed the extension was a gift to the taxpayer, who would have been stuck with paying for potentially exorbitantly expensive insurance, and price support subsidies, while others believed the extension eviscerated a score of important programs. With Congressional leaders, on both sides of the aisle, searching for inefficient, wasteful and outdated programs, at a time when federal budget deficits have simply become unsustainable; one thing is for sure, instead of addressing the urgent challenges our farm, food and wood fiber system faces, the farm bill has become a patchwork of programs that not only fails to support each other, but are often contradictory. Without a larger discussion about long-term goals for a system we want and can afford, this failure is no surprise. A potential solution being brought forward by House Agriculture Committee Chairman Frank Lucas (R-OK) is the replacement of permanent agricultural laws from 1938 and 1949 with the commodity title, which would allow the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, better known as SNAP or food stamps, to continue as an appropriated entitlement rather than be formally reauthorized. It is still unclear when the House will agree to a conference committee and whether negotiators can produce a bill that could pass that chamber. Early indications are that the republican version of the bill will be unacceptable to nearly all democrats. Senate Agriculture Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow (D-MI) formally requested a conference on the farm bill last week, while she and other Senate leaders joined Administration officials in chastising the House for separating farm programs from SNAP. A group of republican House members began meeting last week to discuss the stand-alone nutrition title, and published reports indicated they were considering cuts in the neighborhood of $120 to $130 billion dollars over ten years, six times greater than the amount the original farm bill would have cut. If the Senate conferees demand a conference report that includes nutrition programs, it is unclear whether House conferees would report it back to the House, or whether it could even pass if they did. Unfortunately, many good programs funded by the farm bill are caught in the food stamp crossfire. Forest management, as well as forest research and forestry assistance, has long been within the jurisdictions of the Agriculture Committees. Although most forestry programs are permanently authorized, forestry has usually been addressed in the periodic farm bills. The 2008 farm bill contained a separate forestry title, with provisions establishing national priorities for forestry assistance. These provisions required statewide forest assessments and strategies; provided competitive funding for certain programs; created new programs for open space conservation and for emergency reforestation; and prohibited imports of illegally logged wood products. Forestry provisions were included in other titles as well—the conservation title revised the definition of conservation actions to include forestry activities for all conservation programs; the trade title required special reporting on softwood lumber imports; the energy title established two woody biomass energy programs; and the tax title included three provisions altering tax treatments for forests and landowners. These are all good provisions and are awaiting reauthorization. In addition, the 2013 House and Senate versions include several new and important forestry related provisions, with the majority originating in the House version. Provisions include codifying the Silvicultural Rule, repealing the Administrative Appeals Act, extending Stewardship Contracting, expanding forest health by including a 10,000 acre categorical exclusion for hazardous fuel reduction projects, expanding the Good Neighbor Authority, a categorical exclusion for salvage projects after a declared disaster, and a “know your customer” provision directing the U.S. Forest Service to analyze how the National Forests are meeting the needs of nearby wood consumers. The farm bill is reauthorized every five years. Assuming Congress will find a path forward and pass a bill this year, now is the time to address the many challenges facing our farm, food and wood fiber systems before the 2013 farm bill expires in 2018. We need a public policy agenda that supports a fair and sustainable system that builds resiliency and is able to withstand shocks in the market place, climate-induced events, and many other economic and environmental challenges. On behalf of the Montana Wood Products Association, I am Julia Altemus, thanks for listening. Continue reading




