Video: Turning Illegally Logged Wood Into A Walmart Toilet Seat
This week's New Yorker reports on how illegally logged Russian wood is smuggled over the border into China, where it's turned into all sorts of products. In this video that accompanies the article, you see it end up as toilet seats for sale in U.S. Walmart stores.
It's hard to think of an object that isn't made of wood or packaged or encounters wood at some point in its journey through the economy. Any number of household items that you can buy at Walmart, like a toilet seat for instance, may very well be made from Russian wood.
"Hot Seats" [NewYorker.com]
Attention, Walmart shoppers! This ad is for you! Woo hoo!
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Comments:
@Norcross:
Seriously... I would expect at the most wood textured molded plastic. But real, solid wood? At Walmart?
I love how the Consumerist and the New Yorker focused not on the fact that Russians are logging illegally, or that Chinese importers are knowingly buying illegally logged wood, but instead on Walmart. Walmart didn't cut the trees down, and they probably didn't know the wood was illegal. But yeah, let's demonize them for the illegal actions of their suppliers' suppliers.
@Git Em SteveDave loves this guy-->:
Umm...instead of crying in the woods why don't they just go out and plant a ton of trees? Crying and moaning never got anyone anywhere, no matter how kooky their beliefs.
@mugsywwiii:
Sorry, that should have been their suppliers' suppliers' suppliers' suppliers.
Walmart -> "middleman" (per video) -> toilet seat manufacturer -> wood importer -> logger <- bad guy!
@KyleOrton: Zing!
I don't see what the big deal is? It's not like they're stealing wood from old growth American forests.
Mostly because they're all cut down...
@mugsywwiii: If you can't source it back to the start, don't accept it into your supply chain. You can't, as a company, claim ignorance of where your product comes from and think that absolves you from responsibility.
And by "responsibility" I mean simply don't sell it, which isn't an impossible corporate goal. Walmart says it's phasing out these wood sources over the next six years, in fact.
Thinking of products not made from wood is easy.
Thinking of products not PACKAGED IN WOOD (to include paper made from wood pulp) is difficult.
@KyleOrton: which they can use as flooring, and then the next person can tear it out to replace with more rare, illegal wood.
The Chinese have the manufacturing capacity but little raw materials or fuel. Good thing their next door neighbor (and military operations partner) have 11 time zones of the stuff.
The Russians count the illegal Chinese immigrants in their national census without protest.
Not that we have anything to worry about with Dumbya in charge.
@Chris Walters: in this "global economy" it is very difficult to do complete product sourcing. I agree with the original comment that Wal-Mart, of all the parties involved, is the least to blame. There are rules and regulations to be followed and the retail outlet is not the one responsible for the manufacturers. People seem to think that EVERYTHING in wal-mart is "sam's choice" brand or something. They don't commision every product in the store. Most stuff just sits on their shelves for them to sell for some manufacturer.
I hate hippies as much as the next guy,
But planting trees is not a solution to the issue. Adding a ton of trees will just make it tougher for other trees to survive, and delplete the water in a given area.
If they want to help, they can add kelp to the ocean.... and then die at sea preferably. Feeding fish and then later said kelp.













Over hill, over dale
Russian wood never fails!