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Buy a couch made of FSC-certified wood
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Buying a couch made of Forest Stewardship Council (FSC)-certified sustainable wood guarantees it is taken from forests that are properly managed.
How to buy a couch made of FSC-certified sustainable wood
Shopping for a sustainable-certified couch can be a daunting task, however there are an increasing number of furniture companies carrying FSC-certified furniture, couches included.
- Certified listings: Start by checking the Forest Certification Resource Center, which has a searchable database of suppliers and companies that are currently making and selling certified wood furniture. Look for those companies that use only FSC-certified wood.
- Sustainable portals: For links to additional companies that offer FSC-certified furniture and other wood products, visit Healthy Forests, Healthy Communities Partnership. Also check out Forest Certification Resource Center: a nonprofit voluntary initiative committed to promoting responsible forest products. The website includes a searchable database of companies who manufacture and sell FSC-certified products, as well as a handy table that compares various auditors and creditors.
- Logo location: When browsing in a store, be sure to look for the FSC logo on wood products. Most items made with FSC-certified wood have on-product FSC labels. However some companies aren't consistent about applying them.
- Proof of purchase: If a company claims that a product is FSC-certified, but it doesn't bear the logo, ask to see the supplier's FSC certificate and/or product tracking information, including invoices or receipts (which should indicate FSC certification).
Find it! FSC-certified sustainable wood couch makers
Although not a comprehensive list, this selection of furniture makers should get you started. Since either some or all of their stock is FSC-certified, you may need to check each piece to verify that it's been sustainably harvested.
Beeken Parsons couches
Furniture designer makes FSC-certified chairs and a limited selection of larger seating items. Visit the company's Shelburne, VT showroom or order online.Berkeley Mills couches
Carries a variety of custom crafted couches made with FSC-certified wood. Visit the company's Berkeley, CA showroom or order online.Charles Shackleton and Miranda Thomas Ltd. couches
Bridgewater, VT furniture designer carries handcrafted sofas and loveseats. Visit a showroom or call to order.Cotswold Furniture Makers couches
Offers one- and two-person custom crafted seating options. Visit the Stowe, VT showroom or order online.Crate and Barrel loveseat
Arbor Loveseat is a good option for outdoor couch seating (order from anywhere online).Furnature The Castine Futon Frame
It’s a couch, no, it’s a bed! This versatile piece is great for guest rooms and basements. Made from FSC-certified maple, eco-friendly fabrics and fills, and finished using no-VOC stains and water-based glues.Hardwood Artisans couches
Carries a large selection of rustic couch and chair options. Visit 4 showrooms in Virginia and Maryland (Washington, DC metro area) or order online.Heartwood Inc. couches
A custom contract furniture maker in Seattle offering modern pieces. Order directly from the company.IF Green couches
Offers retro FSC-certified wood couches and other furniture. Visit the Portland, OR offices or order online.Knoll couches
Carries simple couches and sofa couches.Q Collection couches
This New York City furniture designer not only creates furniture with FSC-certified wood, but also refuses to use toxic chemicals such as formaldehyde.Robert Bergelin Company couches
With showrooms in Hickory, NC and Winnetka, IL, this furniture maker carries handcrafted living room seating options. Call or visit showrooms to order.South Cone couches
Offers South American style couches and other furniture. Visit website for stores that carry South Cone furniture.The Joinery couches
Carries rustic styled couches and chairs along with modern pieces. Visit the Portland, OR, showroom or call to order.Viesso couches
Offers many couch options, with an easy-to-use customization system online. Visit Santa Monica, CA, showroom or order online.Woodshanti Cooperative, Inc. couches
Worker-owned San Francisco cooperative carries some seating options. Call or visit the website to request a quote on custom-designed furniture.
Buying a couch made from FSC-certified sustainable wood helps you go green because…
- It ensures forests are properly managed, which in turn ensures soil, waterways, and wildlife are protected.
Regardless of a couch's style, it requires some amount of wood for the construction of the frame. Forest ecosystems are all critical to maintaining life on Earth. They filter the air, stabilize climate by absorbing CO2, and provide habitat for 90 percent of all land-dwelling plant and animals species.[1]
As demand for wood and other forestry products has grown, many groups have worked to develop a management system that promotes responsible forest practices to protect trees, soil, waterways, and wildlife, while maximizing the quality and quantity of timber.[2] Forest certification alerts consumers to wood products that come from properly managed forests.[1]
Forest Stewardship Council
There are several organizations certifying lumber, but according to the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), only one is preferred by green experts worldwide—the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC).[1] FSC is an international nonprofit organization that was formed in 1993. It accredits certifiers, who in turn use auditors to inspect timber operations (only those that voluntarily request FSC certification) to guarantee that trees are sustainably harvested using forestry practices that maintain the diversity of native species, prevent over-cutting, protect watersheds and ensure long-term forest management.[3]
FSC's program is endorsed by most national and international environmental NGOs; unions; social groups; indigenous peoples; timber industries; private, communal, and state forest owners; and scientists from over 60 countries,[4] including such organizations as the World Wildlife Fund, the Wilderness Society, the NRDC, the Rainforest Alliance, and the World Resources Institute.[5]
FSC has six strict principles for monitoring every stage of production, distribution, and sale of wood products, and works with wholesalers, manufacturers, distributors, and retailers.[6] These principles cover environmental, social, and economic criteria,[5] such as harvest rates and clearing sizes; natural forest conditions; rare, threatened, and endangered species; adequate conservation zones; chemical use (minimized); protection of streams and lakes; and the health of workers, communities, and indigenous peoples.[1] Only those operations that meet the criteria are allowed to display the FSC label.[3]
In the last few years, the top three wood buyers in the world—Home Depot, Lowe’s, and IKEA—all committed to work with FSC to reduce their consumption of non-sustainable wood products.[7]
Controversies
Buying wood with some type of environmental certification can help ensure it was harvested sustainably, however not all certifying bodies are equal. FSC is the only international accrediting body which guarantees that wood has been sustainably harvested. There are several other labels used to certify wood which are not nearly as rigorous.[8] For instance, the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) (developed by the American Forest & Paper Association, an industry trade group) was found to have significant shortcomings when compared to FSC.[9]
The anti-SFI coalition (including such groups as ForestEthics, Greenpeace, Sierra Club, and the NRDC) has charged SFI with failing to effectively protect forests (especially old growth stands) by permitting members to indiscriminately log diverse forests and replace them with a single species, ignoring crucial social issues,[10] and delivering no credible assurances to the consumer.[11]
Glossary
- old growth forest: Also known as virgin forest, ancient forest, or primary forest, this is an area of forest which has attained great age, containing a variety of vertical layers of vegetation, including large live trees. These forests may also be home to many rare species that are dependent on these ecologically unique old growth features.[12]
External links
- Don’t Buy SFI: A campaign spearheaded by groups such as ForestEthics, Sierra Club, and Greenpeace.
- EcoTimber: Offers a summary of some of the less-stringent certification programs, which, when compared to FSC, fall significantly short.
- Forest Stewardship Council International : The international branch of FSC.
- SmartWood: An approved US FSC auditor.
Footnotes
- Natural Resources Defense Council - Good Wood: How Forest Certification Helps the Environment
- Rainforest Alliance - Conserving Forestlands: Why Sustainable Forestry?
- The Green Guide - Wood Furniture: The Problems
- World Wildlife Fund - Responsible forestry: Certification
- Green Home - Alternatives to Old Growth & Virgin Lumber
- Scientific Certification Systems - Chain-of-Custody Certification
- Rainforests.net - The Forest Industry in the 21st Century: Top 5 Wood Buyers
- The Green Guide - Wood Furniture: The Solutions
- The Meridian Institute - Comparative Analysis of the Forest Stewardship Council© and Sustainable Forestry Initiative® Certification Programs
- Grist - Certifiably Insane?: Wood-labeling program less green than it appears
- Don’t Buy SFI - Why Forests and Certification Matter
- Pacific Northwest - Definitions - Old-growth Forest


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