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California drought 'to cost farmers $1.7 billion'
by Staff Writers
Los Angeles (AFP) May 20, 2014


Canadian forestry firm sues over environmental audit
Montreal (AFP) May 20, 2014 - Canada's largest forest products company is suing over an audit that criticized the company's logging practices for violating environmental standards, according to court documents obtained by AFP Tuesday.

Resolute Forest Products, which makes pulp and paper from wood, has filed the lawsuit against the Rainforest Alliance, a global group that certifies best forestry practices.

After its 2014 audit of the company's northern Ontario province operations, the Rainforest Alliance had recommended the company's Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certificate be suspended.

The environmental stamp of approval allows a company to say it is following environmentally sustainable forestry practices.

Resolute is contesting the audit, alleging the report was "biased." They have won a court injunction sealing the audit and preventing its release this month.

A spokesman for the company said the draft report contains "an alarming number of biased interpretations, errors and omissions, serious process and fairness issues and a very clear conflict of interest."

"We felt we had no choice" but to launch a court action, the spokesman, Seth Kursman, told public broadcaster CBC.

The lawsuit is the second launched by the company against an environmental group. Resolute is also suing Greenpeace over a report also critical of the company's forestry practices.

One of California's worst droughts in decades could cost the US state's farmers $1.7 billion, a study warned Monday, a week after alarmingly early wildfires forced tens of thousands of homeowners to evacuate.

The drought could leave 14,500 workers without jobs in California's Central Valley, known as America's food basket for providing vast supplies of fruit, vegetables and meat.

The new study, by the University of California's Davis Center for Watershed Sciences, found that farmers in the Central Valley would get only two-thirds of their normal river water this year.

Some six percent of irrigated cropland will have to lie fallow, while groundwater pumping will cost $450 million, more than a quarter of the estimated $1.7 billion the drought will cost the farming industry.

"Without access to groundwater, this year's drought would be truly devastating to farms and cities throughout California," said Jay Lund, director of the Center for Watershed Sciences.

The Central Valley, which runs for about 450 miles (700 kilometers) south to north, is the "richest food-producing region in the world," it said. Much of America's fresh fruits, nuts and vegetables are grown on its seven million acres of irrigated farmland.

"The research confirms where emergency drought assistance will be needed most," said Karen Ross of the California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA), which co-funded the research with the University of California.

California's drought -- the third year in a row with well below average rainfall -- has also extended the annual wildfire season through the winter, rather than seeing a seasonal lull.

Last week nearly a dozen wildfires erupted in San Diego County, forcing tens of thousands of residents to flee their homes amid an intense heatwave. Temperatures abated over the weekend.

While the drought will impose "major hardships on many farmers, small communities and the environment," it should not threaten California's overall economy, said Lund.

Agriculture accounts for under three percent of the state's $1.9-trillion-a-year gross domestic product.

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