Thanks for that link Andy.
Not before time. Things were maybe holding at an equilibrium before, but now a fast growing Chinese middle class, eager to buy the Rosewood furniture they esteem so highly, has tipped the balance. Something has to change if there's to be any left for future generations. Remember Zitan? I haven't seen any for years, pretty much every stick now goes to China.
The CITES regulations generally don't prohibit buying, selling, or ownership of Rosewood, only international trade. I've got quite a lot of Rosewood that I've bought over many years. Brexit will mean CITES rules says it stays in the UK. However, furniture fashions in northern Europe and the US have changed and I've got far more than I'll ever make into furniture and sell, so I've started to off-load some to the German, Dutch, and Scandinavian luthier trade before the Brexit door gets slammed shut. I had a German buyer over a few weeks ago, interestingly his criteria were different than mine. Where as I'd judge quality only by colour and grain, he was very focussed on ring count, how many growth rings per centimetre. Consequently some of his highest offers were for some of my least favourite timbers, so everyone went away happy.
I hope CITES proves effective, I think it will stop some of the biggest abuses, but unfortunately as prices rise so smugglers will find ever more ingenious routes. Apparently there was a thriving trade a few years back in large earthenware vases being shipped from Brazil to Portugal. When they arrived the importers threw the vases away and carefully dismembered the elaborate packing crates and pallets, which were solid Kingwood and Rio Rosewood!