In this video, Taylor Guitars co-founder Bob Taylor talks about the world’s dwindling supply of ebony, the realities of ebony sourcing in Cameroon, and Taylor’s efforts to preserve a sustainable supply for the entire musical instrument community. With the co-purchase of Crelicam, an ebony mill in Cameroon in 2011, Taylor began to develop a fresh framework for sustainable sourcing, one that blends socially responsible forestry with job training that will help Cameroonian communities support themselves and improve their living standards.
From the Taylor website: “We need to use the ebony that the forest gives us,†emphasizes Bob, who has personally met with a number of other prominent guitar manufacturers since the Crelicam purchase to spread awareness of the new realities regarding ebony sourcing. While the current conditions don’t mean that the days of all-black ebony are entirely gone, they do mean that if we want to ensure a sustainable ebony supply for future generations of instruments and players, we must embrace greater cosmetic diversity.
The story was recently picked up by the Los Angeles Times. In the article, but Ron White, Taylor was also quoted as saying, regarding the workers at the mill:
“We are going to start doing a lot of the processing and that will provide more jobs and more higher-paying jobs and triple the value of what they can sell, instead of just the raw material,” Taylor said. “There is money in the ebony, and they deserve to have more of that.”
Click these links for more info:
Taylor Guitar’s Commitment to Sustainability
Taylor Guitar’s page on Sustainable Ebony
LA Time’s Article about Talyor Guitar’s purchase of the Crelicam Mill
I’ll give him the benefit of the doubt, but Bob Taylor couldn’t figure this out 20 years ago? I guess it takes an act of awakening conscious to bring it to life. They have been making guitars for almost 40 years. Did they think demand was going to decrease? I’m happy Taylor woke up, but it seems disingenuous to me.