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Send a letter to Kimberly-Clark a letter telling them you won’t buy forest destruction.
Check out the Canadian Greenpeace Tissue Product Shopper's Guide
Find out if your school, office or other major companies are using Kimberly-Clark and ask them to buy 100% recycled fibre toilet paper and other products instead.
Avoid buying Kimberly-Clark products and brands. Buy 100% recycled tissue and toilet paper instead and use cloth towels, hankies and napkins.
When Greenpeace forest campaigners in the US issued a pocket-sized version of the Recycled Tissue and Toilet Paper Consumer Guide it caused a big splash in news media around the world. One company - Kimberly-Clark - was mentioned in every single article. As the largest manufacturer of tissue products in the world and the maker of Kleenex, they stood out as the villain: responsible for continual destruction of Canada’s Boreal Forest to make disposable products.
As a result of this intense media attention across Canada and around the world, people everywhere are all thinking the same thing as Greenpeace: there’s no excuse for Kimberly-Clark wiping out ancient forests to make toilet paper and facial tissue.
Kimberly-Clark uses pulp from intact and endangered forests, including the habitat of threatened species such as endangered woodland caribou, to make disposable consumer products. They also supply large amounts of toilet paper, tissue products and paper towels to major institutions and companies like universities, office buildings, hotels, restaurants and retail chains.
As a result of the controversy surrounding Kimberly-Clark’s purchases of pulp from ancient forests, a number of very large and high profile customers of the company have cancelled their purchasing contracts. These include Cineplex, Estee Lauder, and over a dozen universities and colleges including Vermont, Harvard, American, Penn State, and Florida.
Pressuring Kimberly-Clark to stop destroying Canada’s ancient forests has been one of Greenpeace’s longest running campaigns. Tissue guides have been a key component of that campaign: Click here to view the Canadian version.