Transaction Verification Archives - Forest Certification https://forestcertification.in/category/transaction-verification/ FSC Certification Body in India Sun, 21 May 2023 18:05:42 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 https://forestcertification.in/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/favicon-forest-certification.png Transaction Verification Archives - Forest Certification https://forestcertification.in/category/transaction-verification/ 32 32 FSC blocks Brazilian company https://forestcertification.in/fsc-blocks-brazilian-company/ Wed, 26 Jan 2022 17:59:15 +0000 http://themenectar.com/demo/salient/?p=137 FSC has blocked Califórnia Biomassa Ltda (IMA-COC-148623) for failing to justify a potential volume mismatch...

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FSC has blocked Califórnia Biomassa Ltda (IMA-COC-148623) for failing to justify a potential volume mismatch that emerged during the transaction verification loop (TV loop) on FSC-certified charcoal conducted by Assurance Services International (ASI).

According to FSC’s normative procedure on TV loops and the FSC Advice Note 18, all certificate holders are mandated to respond to requests for data and documentation made by their certification bodies (who act on requests from ASI). Failure to respond to these requests is a violation of certification requirements, and certificate holders who do not comply will face serious consequences.

Califórnia Biomassa was a part of the ongoing TV loop on FSC-certified charcoal that is being conducted by ASI on behalf of FSC. During the first phase of this TV loop, ASI found potential volume mismatches in Califórnia Biomassa’s 2019 transactions of FSC-certified charcoal.

Despite repeated requests issued by Imaflora (the concerned certification body), Califórnia Biomassa failed to respond to a request for supporting invoice documentation to support their volume declarations. As a result of Califórnia Biomassa’s non-compliance, its FSC certificate was suspended by Imaflora in September 2021.

Volume mismatch is a serious integrity concern for FSC, and when a certificate holder does not provide clarifications, FSC considers such a non-compliance to be indicative of a deliberate action. Thus, FSC used the data provided by this company during the first phase of the TV loop and determined that there is evidence of false claims, thereby blocking the company from the FSC system.

Based on this assessment, FSC has blocked Califórnia Biomassa from its system for 30 months.

Any company that is blocked by FSC cannot seek recertification and it can no longer make an FSC claim on its products or use the FSC trademark. For more details about the meaning and implications of blockage due to false claims, please refer to FSC Advice Note 18, in pages 25 – 39 of this document.

The ongoing TV loop on FSC-certified charcoal will be completed by the end of 2022, and the final results will be shared in the first quarter of 2023.

Source: FSC News, 26 Jan 2022

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What is Transaction Verification https://forestcertification.in/what-is-transaction-verification/ Thu, 21 Jan 2021 12:32:26 +0000 https://forestcertification.in/?p=6282 Transaction Verification Transaction verification is a process of comparing and then verifying all transactions within...

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Transaction Verification

Transaction verification is a process of comparing and then verifying all transactions within a specific product type, group or region over a given time period.

Certification bodies will be notified when transaction verification is necessary. Certificate holders will also be informed, and will cooperate with their certification body to provide the required data.

How do certificate holders forward transaction data?

Certificate holders can submit their data using pre-defined formats supplied by FSC. The format requires information on volumes bought and sold, as well as unique identifiers such as invoice numbers.

How do certificate holders know if they are subject to transaction verification?

Certification bodies will notify the affected certificate holders, providing clear instructions, timelines and requirements of the specified transaction verification loop.

Who will process the data that is submitted for transaction verification and is a non-disclosure agreement signed as part of the process?

Transaction verification is a certification activity carried out by Certification Bodies with their clients, and Certification Bodies collect the transaction data from their client certificate holders.

As with all certification activities, and according to FSC-STD-20-001, clause 1.8, the Certification Body “shall be responsible, through legally enforceable commitments, for the management of all information obtained or created during the performance of certification activities”. According to FSC-STD-20-001, clause 2.4.2, the Certification Body must have established procedures to “define the controls needed for the identification, transport, transmission, storage, protection, retrieval and disposition of its records related to the implementation of FSC requirements, including controls to safeguard confidentiality”. Therefore, if a certificate holder has concerns on matters regarding certification activities, including Transaction Verification, the certificate holder should raise these concerns with its Certification Body.

Certification Bodies must have the necessary agreements with their clients to comply with the requirements of FSC-STD-20-001.

What happens if a certificate holder refuses to provide transaction data to their certification body?

The refusal to provide transaction data represents a breach of the contractual agreement between the organization and the certification body. If the information is not provided within the time frame requested by the certification body, the certificate holder will be issued a CAR or have their certificate suspended and/or terminated.

What are the consequences for uncertified businesses that are found making false and/or inaccurate claims?

Fraud and misuse of the FSC label by non-certificate holders are dealt with through the FSC legal office and trademark enforcement team, which investigate false use of FSC trademarks for non-eligible products and take legal action when needed.

What is the difference between false claims, inaccurate claims, and fraud?

‘Fraud’ is the term used for intentional false claims within the FSC system. ‘False claims’ happen when a product that is not eligible to be sold as FSC certified is sold with FSC claims on its sales documents. False claims can be intentional or not. They are only considered fraud when it can be proven without a doubt that the claim was made intentionally. ‘Inaccurate claims’ are where a product that is eligible to be sold as FSC certified is sold with the wrong claim (e.g. a product that should be sold as FSC Mix is sold as FSC 100%).

What information must be provided to fulfil the transaction verification requirement?

The data required for each TV loop may vary but generally will include information on trading partner (e.g. name, FSC CoC code), quantity, units, FSC claim type and species. Other data may be requested such as transaction identifier (e.g. invoice number), transaction date, description of products, country of origin, etc. No financial information will be required. The data will be collected on a sample basis, usually relating to a specific species, product type or timeframe in a specified format. The size of the sample requested will be determined by FSC and ASI based on risk. Auditors may also request access to shipping documents, invoices, or similar for confirmation.

Source: fsc.org

 

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Supply chain fraud in Vietnam https://forestcertification.in/supply-chain-fraud-in-vietnam/ Wed, 20 Jan 2021 16:40:53 +0000 http://themenectar.com/demo/salient/?p=84 Wild Question Marks and devious Semikoli, but the Little Blind Text didn’t...

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FSC does not tolerate any form of consumer deception involving fraud by businesses that hold FSC certificates.

To this effect, FSC has requested its independent assurance company, Assurance Services International (ASI), to start investigating allegations of fraud with Cambodian illegal timber in the supply chains of several specific FSC-certified entities in Vietnam.

FSC transaction verification exercise

is carried out to check probable fraud in the supply chain.

This is an isolated incident in the FSC system within the over 35,000 chain of custody certificates and although it is serious, it is not indicative of any widespread fault in the system.

Nevertheless, FSC is treating it with the diligence it deserves.

FSC has specific mechanisms in place to combat fraud. These mechanisms include transaction verification, and special assessments that ASI conducts on certificate holders to verify their compliance with FSC standards.

Transaction verification is a process of comparing and then verifying all FSC transactions made by a company within a specific product type, product group or region and during a specified time period, for example all claims made for FSC-certified bamboo products in 2017. Transaction verification is now an important requirement in our chain of custody standard and strengthens our supply chains.

When a product group or species is confirmed through investigations as high-risk by ASI, FSC implements requirements for transaction verification for companies that include this product type or species as part of their scope. The verification is conducted by a certification body and ASI. There are currently three options that certificate holders can use for transaction verification:

  • Certificate holders can enter relevant data through a supporting transaction verification tool named Falcon. It saves time and costs for certification bodies when creating transaction records and helps auditors from their certification bodies to receive information in the correct form they need the records;
  • Alternatively, a desk audit will allow certificate holders to fill in a downloadable spread-sheet template and send that on to their certification bodies; or
  • Certificate holders can opt to do an on-site audit where transaction information is collected manually by the auditor for ASI to verify.

Wrongdoers are punished in the FSC system. Fraud, when affecting FSC-certified material, can lead to immediate suspension or termination of the certificate of a chain of custody certified business or of a FSC trademark license holder. This action ultimately results in the business being unable to trade any product using an FSC label.

As an additional resource to combat illegality, FSC has a mechanism known as the FSC Policy for Association. It regulates what unacceptable activities certified businesses must commit to avoid, including those activities that are outside the scope of their certification. This safety measure is to ensure that FSC certificate holders are not involved in illegal activities when conducting their business.

If fraud committed by an FSC certificate holder led (or leads) to illegal timber trade, illegal logging, or any other unacceptable activity under the terms of the Policy for Association, then this safeguard is applicable and may result in investigations leading to punitive action against the certificate holder.

Recently, a Polish charcoal producer, Dancoal, had its trademark license agreement suspended because evidence confirmed that it had been mixing non-FSC certified products with FSC material. This swift action demonstrates fraud is not permitted in the FSC system.

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