Being demonstrative has included proving that bamboo could be successfully produced at a commercial scale across different species and climates from both seed and tissue culture plantlets, proving that climate change benefits (accredited by the Verified Carbon Standard), as well as biodiversity and social co-benefits (accredited by the Climate, Community, Biodiversity Alliance) could be achieved, and ultimately proving that bamboo could be produced in a truly sustainable manner through the early acquisition of FSC Forest Management certification for the Rio Siquia and Rio Kama plantations.
EcoPlanet further notes that, in addition to these certifications, its plantations have received independent accreditation from a range of institutions, from the World Bank to the World Wildlife Fund (WWF). Such accreditation demonstrates that a for-profit company can earn strong financial returns in a sustainable and transparent way, while positively impacting the lives of the poor, improving the environment, and protecting the planet, the company emphasizes. EcoPlanet adds that it is hopeful this success will set a new global benchmark for the industrialization of bamboo.
With this framework strongly in place to guide the development of each new plantation, EcoPlanet has set its sights on a second phase of growth–achieving the reforestation of 1 million acres of highly degraded land into fully functioning commercial bamboo forests, with a focus on Southeast Asia, Brazil, and Africa. Split into manageable operations of 25,000 – 100,000 acres, these are to be dedicated plantations; each one co-developed alongside timber dependent manufacturing companies within strategic locations globally, providing them the ability to create a long-term competitive price advantage, secure supply, and a meeting of each entity's sustainability goals, the company explains.
"While our achievements to date are still a long way from our 1,000,000 acre goal, they have proved not only that we can, but that we are committed to industrializing bamboo in a way that benefits the local community, is environmentally positive, and enables the feedstock security that multinational corporations require to ultimately move away from unsustainable logging practices, and make the switch to an alternative fiber," says Troy Wiseman, CEO of EcoPlanet Bamboo Group.
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