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Greenpeace activists protest against a shipment of Indonesian palm oil en route to Rotterdam by painting "Forest Crime" on the side of the palm oil tanker Isola Corallo. The tanker is transporting a consignment of 29,000 metric tonnes of crude palm oil from Indonesia's largest palm oil producer, Sinar Mas, to Europe which has already been a subject to a Greenpeace action six weeks ago in the port of Dumai in Sumatra, Indonesia.
Enlarge ImageRecent Greenpeace investigations (1) have brought to light information showing that Sinar Mas is actively destroying Indonesian rain forests and peat lands. While not itself a household name, Sinar Mas supplies to multinationals like Nestle, Pizza Hut, and Burger King.
"Sinar Mas
is a climate and forest criminal" said Suzanne Kröger, Forests campaigner for
Greenpeace Netherlands. "Despite on-going discussions
with Greenpeace, Sinar Mas continues to destroy Indonesia's last rain forests.
Now is the time for companies like Nestle and
Burger King to show their concern for the welfare of the planet by cancelling
their contracts with Sinar Mas, otherwise they are supporting
the ongoing destruction of some of the world's last remaining forests and
thereby dramatically speeding up climate change."
Companies like
Unilever, who also buy from Sinar Mas, are supporting the Greenpeace call for a
moratorium on any further expansion of palm oil plantations in the remaining
Indonesian rain forests. In addition to pushing for the moratorium, Greenpeace
believes that companies now need to show that they are serious by cancelling
contracts with companies like Sinar Mas that continue to deforest for palm oil
in Indonesia.
Indonesia is the world's third largest emitter of greenhouse gases (after China and the USA), almost entirely as a result of deforestation. This is not only a disaster for the climate and local biodiversity, but also for the indigenous communities who depend on the forests for their livelihood, and for unique wildlife such as the endangered Sumatran tiger and orang-utan, as well.
Bustar Maitar,
Forest campaigner for Greenpeace Southeast Asia, says, "If the Indonesian
government doesn't take urgent action now, millions more hectares of pristine
forests will be cut down and burnt. They also need to
stop their hypocrisy: first they sell concessions to companies who have a
long-standing record of forest decimation and then they ask
the international community for funds to protect the very same forests. In
order to qualify for funds to save their forests, the government must implement
a moratorium on any further deforestation so that companies like Sinar Mas
don't cut down all of the trees before the money can reach the forests."
Greenpeace's
"Forests for Climate" funding mechanism for forest protection was
presented at the Poznan climate talks in early December. The document is a
blueprint for the international community to establish funding for tropical
forest protection as one of the major steps in the fight to curb climate change.
Countries like Indonesia are hoping to get financial compensation for their
attempts to reduce deforestation, meanwhile Sinar Mas's expansion plans include
the conversion of almost 2 million hectares of pristine forest in Indonesia's Papua
provinces as well as further forest clearing in Kalimantan and Sumatra.
(1) See the Greenpeace briefing 'Sinar Mas: Indonesian Palm oil menace'
http://www.greenpeace.org/seasia/en/press/reports/sinar_mas_indonesian_palm_oil_menance
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