Small changes at Wal-Mart can have a big impact. Wal-Mart is the biggest US retailer of furniture, so we're seeing it as a good thing that they have joined a World Wildlife Fund initiative and announced they will investigate their supply chain and phase out illegal sources of wood. Here's the whole story...
It all started around the beginning of the year, when the independent Environmental Investigation Agency released a report titled "How Wal-Mart's Sourcing Practices Encourage Illegal Logging and Threaten Endangered Species". Among other things, the report laid out how EIA investigators traced the source of wood used for cribs sold at Wal-Mart back to a Siberian tiger habitat, where officials were bribed to look the other way.
In response, Wal-Mart announced that they joined the WWF's Global Forest & Trade Network and will work to phase out illegal sources of wood from their supply chain. To us, this is a step in the right direction, but given Wal-Mart's low-cost-at-any-cost corporate culture, we'd rather see Wal-Mart make a full commitment to the Forest Stewardship Council's FSC wood certification program. Home Depot carries some, but not all, FSC-certified lumber, so it is not unprecedented for a large retailer to sign on to a meaningful certification program.
Do you have Wal-Mart furniture? Do you think about the source of wood in the furniture you buy?
I'm just not sure if I can start going there again...
view Lizzykewl's profile
"Phase out"? If the stuff is illegal why don't they just stop?
view Charlotte's profile
I don't shop at Walmart because I so disagree with their "low cost at any cost" philosophy. The only way we as consumers can vote on these issues is with our $$ and how we choose to spend them. No Walmart furniture here.
view Alice's profile
Walmart sucks...no matter how they spin it....I ain't buying it!
view hdtex's profile
I love how we say we should vote with our "$$", but refuse to support an obviously good initiative by Walmart with our "$$."
They may not be the best company in the world, but they are certainly one of the largest. A small change like this can be very impacting and lead to more important changes, that at least deserves some support.
view TheGadfly's profile
It is a good change, but I still find it alarming that so many people buy their furniture at wall mart. That cheap furniture will be out on the street in a few years, a total waste of resources, even if they're from "normal" forests, not tiger ones. Today, in my house, I have furniture that my parents bought 55 years ago, after saving up for years for it. I treasure it more than anything, and hope my son will take it after I'm gone. I do still think Wallmart is the biggest perpetrator of our wasteful consumer society.
view SFGail's profile