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MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Saturday, 22 July 2017
Pepsico, Unilever and Nestlé accused of complicity in illegal rainforest destruction
Palm oil plantations on illegally deforested land in Sumatra – home
to elephants, orangutans and tigers – have allegedly been used to supply
scores of household brands, says new report
Deforestation in the Leuser ecosystem, one of the last homes to Sumatran elephants, orangutans, rhinos and tigers.
Photograph: Sutanta Aditya/Barcroft Images
Pepsico, Unilever
and Nestlé have been accused of complicity in the destruction of
Sumatra’s last tract of rainforest shared by elephants, orangutans,
rhinos, and tigers together in one ecosystem.
Plantations built on deforested land have allegedly been used to
supply palm oil to scores of household brands that also include
McDonald’s, Mars, Kellogg’s and Procter & Gamble, according to a new
report.
“If more immediate action is not taken to enforce ‘no deforestation’
policies, these brands will be remembered as the corporate giants
responsible for the destruction of the last place on earth where
Sumatran elephants, orangutans, rhinos and tigers roamed side by side,”
says the study by Rainforest Action Network (RAN).
Using satellite data, photographic evidence and GPS coordinates, the research builds on evidence gathered earlier this year
to show ongoing illegal forest clearances across swathes of the 2.6m
hectare Leuser ecosystem, despite a moratorium announced last June.
The palm oil reaches major brands via a twisting supply chain that
stretches from the PT Agra Bumi Niaga (ABN) logging company, which
delivers to a processing mill owned by PT Ensem Sawita (ES), which then
sells the palm oil on to some of the world’s largest traders. PT is an
abbreviation that denotes a limited liability company in Indonesia.
PT
ABN declined requests for comment but after extensive Guardian
inquiries, PT ES admitted using ABN’s palm oil – due to confusion after
the logging firm changed its name – and said that it “regretted this
failure”.
The company promised to “strengthen our traceability practices by
exchanging information to relevant stakeholders who have palm oil
plantation data.”
However, Gemma Tillack, RAN’s agribusiness campaigns director, said
that ABN’s name change had been reported, and the continued inability of
palm traders and food brands to source the palm they used back to the
plantations showed a wider failing of due diligence systems.
“Relying on NGOs to uncover the truth is simply not good enough,” she
said. “If RAN, with our relatively limited budget, can figure it out,
then multibillion dollar, multinational corporations certainly can. The
fact that they haven’t demonstrates that it is not a lack of ability
holding them back, but a lack of will.”
Leuser’s vanishing ecosystem is already have a devastating effect on critically endangered elephants which use it as a migratory corridor. At least 35 elephants
were killed in Leuser between 2012-2015, and human-animal conflicts are
fast increasing as palm plantations fragment animal habitats.
Many species such as tigers, clouded leopards and sun bears
are becoming more vulnerable to poachers, as their environment
disappears. Leuser is still Sumatra’s largest rainforest and its Unesco
world heritage status was reaffirmed this month, despite Indonesian government protests.
But its deforestation rate is among the world’s highest.
In the 2015 haze disaster, Sumatran wildfires, often linked to
plantation activity, destroyed 8,000 sq miles of rainforest,
contributing to the early deaths of an estimated 100,000 people and emitting more CO2 than the whole of the UK that year.
Indonesia’s president Joko Widodo responded with a moratorium on new
palm oil permits last April. Two months later, Aceh’s governor, Zaini
Abdullah ordered palm oil companies to halt all forest clearing, even
where valid permits existed.
But
RAN’s research shows that ABN continued clearing another 336 hectares
of Sumatran rainforest after Abdullah’s instruction, with 12 hectares of
new deforestation since February.
In just one district of the Leuser, nine other suppliers to milling
companies continued logging activities since last June across
concessions with a combined area of more than 26,000 hectares, according
to RAN’s research.
Tillack said: “We believe that there was a rush to clear land because
the [logging] companies knew that there would be government
intervention to stop forest clearances.
“Global brands like Pepsico
can no longer hide behind paper promises and simply blame their
international partners for forest crimes. The Leuser ecosystem will die a
death of a thousand cuts if brands don’t start taking urgent action to
address the root cause of this crisis.”
A spokesman for Pepsico, singled out by RAN as “the ultimate snack food 20 laggard”,
said “We take this issue very seriously, and we are making significant
investments to improve every aspect of our palm oil supply chain. After
being informed of the allegations, we immediately initiated a thorough
investigation. While we do not source directly from the mills in
question, we identified direct suppliers who had the mills in their
supply chains. We have been assured that these suppliers are taking
corrective actions to address the allegations.”
Unilever admitted that it had indirectly bought palm oil from PT ABN
through its suppliers, Wilmar and Musim Mas, and said that it had
requested “a response and an action plan” from them soon.
Nestlé also said that it was investigating the allegations with
Wilmar – which told the guardian that it was sending a team to the
region to assess whether other sources in its supply chain were using palm oil sourcing back to PT ABN’s 2,000 hectare concession.
Mars and Kellogg’s stressed their sustainable palm oil policies,
while Procter & Gamble said that it had told suppliers about its
responsible sourcing policy. McDonald’s denied any links to PT ABN.
Of the palm oil traders which supplying the food brands, IOI said that that it had “registered recent deliveries from PT ES in our supply chain” but that the firm had “confirmed that they no longer source from PT ABN”.
Golden Agri-Resources said that its exposure to PT ES was “relatively
small” but that it would visit the company in the next weeks to find
out if it was indirectly selling on palm oil from PT ABN. Cargill and
Musim Mas both said that they were investigating the reports.
However, the companies had been warned about ‘conflict palm oil’
entering the supply chain through PT ES’s third-party suppliers since
2014, and engagement with the firm had not changed its behaviour.
“Brands and traders tend to hide behind supply chain complexities,”
she said, “but consumers need to know whether or not the palm oil they
use is connected to the destruction of rainforests.”
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