MUKULA

Chinese demand for rosewood furniture is decimating a rare, slow-growing species of African tree

A logger in the Democratic Republic of Congo rests near felled Mukula trees.
A logger in the Democratic Republic of Congo rests near felled Mukula trees.
Image: Greenpeace/Lu Gang
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The making of traditional Chinese furniture is an art form whose craftsmanship dates back as far as 1,000 BC. The furniture is made from hongmu, or “red wood,” a dense, fragrant, and most importantly, hardy wood that allows Chinese artisans to use joinery and doweling instead of glue and nails. Sometimes the word is carved into elaborate patterns or landscapes. Other times its fashioned into sleek seating arrangements that recall imperial China.

On the other side of this market are the forests in Africa and southeast Asia where these hardwoods, more commonly known as rosewood, originate. Of the 33 woods classified as rosewood in China, 16 are endangered or approaching that point. Rosewood substitutes are also starting to come under pressure. Of those, the most threatened may be the Mukula tree, a slow-growing hardwood unique to southern and central Africa that is easily passed off as traditional rosewood. 

Chinese photographer Lu Guang, who won the 2003 World Press Photo award for his work on peasants infected with HIV in Henan province, traveled to Katanga province in the DR Congo as well as eastern China last year documenting the expanding Mukula industry. The project, commissioned by Greenpeace, follows its supply chain from the DRC—where it’s used for traditional medicine, dye, and a source of pollen for bees used in honey production—to processing centers in China and upscale furniture showrooms. 

A Mukula forest in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
A Mukula forest in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Image: Greenpeace/Lu Guang
在刚果(金)加丹加省的森林里,大约100米左右就有一根成年的血檀树,经过砍伐、去皮堆集在一起准备让大卡车运走。
Mukula logs awaiting transportation at a lumberyard in Katanga province in the DRC.
Image: Greenpeace/Lu Guang

There are no official statistics for how many Mukula trees have been felled, but demand for the wood is so high that Zambia has banned exports of the wood. In China, a tonne of Mukula sells for between 17,000 and 22,000 renminbi per tonne ($2,500 and $3,200 a tonne). Greenpeace estimates that as much as 15,000 tonnes of the wood are sold each month from just four of the biggest Mukula markets in Zhang Jiagang in eastern China, home to the country’s largest Mukula processing industry. China’s rosewood furniture market was worth at least 100 billion renminbi ($15 billion) in 2012.

Local authorities are making some efforts to curb the trade. The DRC arrested 14 Chinese nationals in May on suspicion of illegal logging and export of Mukula wood. Still, any serious effort to moderate Mukula logging will have to come from China. 

“As the most influential timber market in the world, China can and should support African countries’ efforts to tackle illegal logging and timber trade,” said Wenjing Pan, Greenpeace’s senior global campaigner.

Loggers in Katanga province, DRC are paid around $5 per day.
Loggers in Katanga province, DRC are paid around $5 per day.
Image: Greenpeace/Lu Guang
Loggers in Katanga province in the DRC.
Loggers in Katanga province in the DRC.
Image: Greenpeace/Lu Guang
Mukula timber that is piled in a storage yard of a rosewood furniture factory.
Mukula logs in a timber yard in Zhangjiagang in eastern China, home to the largest mukula market in the country.
Image: Greenpeace/Lu Gang
Chinese demand for rosewood is threatening the African species of wood, the mukula.
A supervisor at Hebei Dacheng Rosewood Furniture Factory in Zhangjiagang, a coastal Chinese city, inspects a container of recently arrived Mukula wood.
Image: Greenpeace/Lu Guang
Chinese demand for rosewood is threatening the African species of wood, the Mukula.
Workers cut Mukula timber in a rosewood factory in Jinhua in eastern China.
Image: Greenpeace/Lu Guang
Chinese demand for rosewood is threatening the African species of wood, the Mukula.
Workers fashion furniture out of Mukula wood in Zhangjiagang in eastern China.
Image: Greenpeace/Lu Guang
Furniture makers work with Mukula wood in Jinhua, in China’s eastern Zhejiang province.
Furniture makers work with Mukula wood in Jinhua, in China’s eastern Zhejiang province.
Image: Greenpeace/Lu Guang
Chinese demand for rosewood is threatening the African species of wood, the Mukula.
A worker at a furniture factory in Jinhua carves a table made out of Mukula wood.
Image: Greenpeace/Lu Guang
Hand carvings in traditional Chinese rosewood furniture.
Hand carvings in traditional Chinese rosewood furniture.
Image: Greenpeace/Lu Guang
Chinese rosewood furniture in a showroom.
Chinese rosewood furniture in a showroom.
Image: Greenpeace/Lu Guang
Chinese demand for rosewood is threatening the African species of wood, the Mukula.
Traditional Chinese furniture made with rosewood.
Image: Greenpeace/Lu Guang