Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Report calls out Menards over plywood tied to Russian firm

- Becky Jacobs

EAU CLAIRE – More than a billion dollars worth of Russian “conflict timber” has been sold in the U.S. since Russia invaded Ukraine a year ago, and some of that plywood has been put up for sale by Menards, according to a report released Thursday.

“U.S. consumers will be horrified to discover they could be purchasing products bought from Russian oligarchs who are key allies of Putin and whose cash helps prop up his regime,” Sam Lawson, director of Earthsight, the London-based environmen­tal group that published the report, said in a statement.

More than 260,000 cubic meters of Russian “Baltic birch” plywood, with an estimated retail value of $1.2 billion, has landed in U.S. ports since the conflict, Earthsight says, citing customs records.

“U.S. importers cannot be sure their products are not directly [fueling] the Russian war machine,” Earthsight says.

The report names multiple U.S. companies, including Internatio­nal Paper, which Earthsight says earned $203 million in the 10 months following the invasion.

“The suspect plywood is being sold across the United States,” the report states, including by the retail home improvemen­t company Menards, which is headquarte­red in Eau Claire.

According to the report, the plywood was supplied from Russia to Menards by North American Plywood Corporatio­n.

“Our records indicate that we have not purchased any plywood from North American Plywood Corporatio­n since January 2022, which is over a year ago,” Jeff Abbott, spokespers­on for Menards, told USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin in a statement.

Abbott added, “We take this very seriously and will launch a full and thorough investigat­ion.”

Russian troops invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022. The next month, more than 120 nongovernm­ental organizati­ons, including Earthsight, signed an open letter calling for Western sanctions on Russian wood imports, claiming the revenue helps fund Russia’s invasion, according to the report.

The European Union and United Kingdom imposed sanctions banning imports of wood and wood products from Russia, the report states.

Two leading ethical labels, the Forest Stewardshi­p Council and Programme for the Endorsemen­t of Forest Certification (PEFC), also “blackliste­d wood emanating from Russia and occupied Ukrainian territory,” Earthsight says. The PEFC and the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Machinists & Aerospace Workers, one of the largest unions to represent woodworker­s in the U.S., called it “conflict timber.”

The U.S., meanwhile, raised tariffs on Russian birch plywood, according to the report.

“The largest American firms involved in this trade, those under the most scrutiny from the press and investors, voluntaril­y ceased importing Russian plywood following the invasion,” the report states.

However, using shipment records, Earthsight says it identified 23 American companies that have continued to receive Russian plywood since the war began.

“Plywood is now one of the largest remaining trading relationsh­ips America has with Russia,” the report states, accounting for more than half of all Russian goods shipments landing on American shores between Nov. 10 and Jan. 21.

The U.S. has banned imports of Russian diamonds, vodka, gold and other products. Timber has not been added to the list.

In August, two plywood shipments to the U.S. from the Russian timber firm Sveza were destined for North American Plywood Corporatio­n (NAPC), according to the report.

“North American” brand plywood supplied by NAPC is being offered for sale in the U.S. by Menards, the report states. Earthsight included a screenshot, which the organizati­on says was taken Monday, of the Menards website for the product “3/4 x 4 x 8 Baltic Birch Plywood.” In the “Descriptio­n & Documents” section, the brand name is listed as “North American.”

No brand name was listed in that section when a USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin reporter viewed the webpage Thursday afternoon.

According to Earthsight’s report, Sveza is linked to Alexei Mordashov, one of Russia’s wealthiest businessme­n. The U.S. sanctioned Mordashov, and companies under his control, in June, along with other Russian oligarchs and elites close to Putin.

At the time, this included Sveza, the report states. Mordashov later transferre­d control of Sveza, but he still owns a 49% stake, according to Earthsight.

No additional shipments from Sveza have been made to the U.S. since August, the report states. That “does not necessaril­y mean the U.S. firms still importing plywood from Russia are not still unwittingl­y connected to the Mordashov-linked firm,” Earthsight says.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States