Responsible Wood
The Australian Forest Certification Scheme was first endorsed in 2004 and has been re-endorsed a further two times. The latest system, the Responsible Wood Forest Certification System, maintained its endorsement in December 2022. This regional system covers both Australia and New Zealand.
System elements
Sustainable forest management standard | Yes |
Sustainable forest management standard (plantation) | No |
Sustainable forest management standard (trees outside forests) | No |
Group certification requirements | No |
Chain of custody requirements | Yes |
Certification body requirements for chain of custody | Yes |
Full system documentation | Yes |
Endorsement milestones
To maintain its PEFC endorsement, the system must meet specific endorsement milestones. The first milestone is the start of the periodic review within five years of the national approval of the sustainable forest management standard.
- National approval date: 1 December 2021
- Review date: 1 December 2026
2021/2022 system assessment
- Status: Assessment finished, system endorsement maintained
- Type: Revised system (maintaining the endorsement)
- Assessment Report
- Assessor: Form international
- System submitted for assessment: 4 January 2022
- Consultation: 28 February - 28 April 2022
Watch the recording of the webinar to find out more about this national system.
System history
- Re-endorsed: 6 December 2022
- Re-endorsed: 24 April 2015
- Re-endorsed: 15 July 2009
- Endorsed: 18 October 2004
- Joined PEFC: 22 November 2002
Responsible Wood
History before PEFC
In Australia, the concept of Sustainable Forest Management has a long and evolving history. As our understanding of forest ecology has increased and community attitudes have changed, forest management practices have also changed to ensure forests are conserved and managed responsibly so they deliver social, environmental and economic benefits now and in the future – balancing people, planet and profit.
In 2002, the Australian Forestry Standard Ltd, a not-for profit standards development organisation, was established to develop the Australian Forest Certification Scheme. The scheme is underpinned by two Australian Standards® – Forest Management (AS 4708) and Chain of Custody (AS 4707) – which provide guidance and accountability to forest managers, manufacturers and suppliers. They protect and promote Australia’s unique environments by ensuring a forestry industry that is environmentally, economically, socially and culturally sustainable.
In 2004, Australia joined the Program for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC), the global authority on sustainable forest management. Along with Chile, Australia became the first non-European certification system to be endorsed by the PEFC.
What are the benefits of being part of the PEFC alliance?
PEFC provides mutual recognition across a diverse number of countries allowing effective and efficient access to international markets. It also provides best practice international benchmarks for sustainable forest management ensuring that global forests are protected while providing environmental, economic and social benefits.