Monday 17 May 2010

Nestlé gives orang-utans a break

Nestlé gives orang-utans a break
Food and drinks giant to stop using products from rainforest destruction

Singapore/Geneva: 17 May, 2010 – Nestlé, the world’s biggest food and drinks company, announced today that it will stop using products that come from rainforest destruction. The move follows a two month Greenpeace campaign that exposed Nestlé’s use of palm oil in products like KitKat (1). The expansion of palm oil and pulp plantations is driving the destruction of Indonesia’s rainforests and peatlands and pushing endangered orang-utans to the brink of extinction.

Pat Venditti, Greenpeace International Forest Campaign Head, said: “We are delighted that Nestlé plans to give orang-utans a break and we call on other international retailers, such as Carrefour and Wal-mart, to do the same. Since the beginning of our campaign, hundreds of thousands of people have contacted Nestle to say that they will not buy products linked to rainforest destruction.”

Under its new policy, Nestlé commits to identify and exclude companies from its supply chain that own or manage 'high risk plantations or farms linked to deforestation’ (2). This exclusion would apply to companies such as Sinar Mas, Indonesia’s most notorious palm oil and pulp and paper supplier (3), if it fails to meet the criteria set out in the policy. It also has implications for palm oil traders, such as Cargill, which continue to buy from Sinar Mas.

“Nestlé's move sends a clear message to Sinar Mas and to the rest of the palm oil and paper industries that rainforest destruction is not acceptable in the global marketplace. They need to clean up their act and move to implement a moratorium on rainforest destruction and full peatland protection. Greenpeace will closely monitor and push for the rapid implementation of Nestlé's plan,” said Venditti.

Global demand for both palm oil and paper is increasing, with the Sinar Mas corporation expanding into Indonesia's forests and peatlands. As a result, the country has one of the fastest rates of forest destruction (4) on the planet and is the world's third largest greenhouse gas emitter, after China and the United States. (5) Palm oil is used in a huge range of products - from chocolate, toothpaste and cosmetics to so-called 'climate friendly' biofuels.

Bustar Maitar, Greenpeace Southeast Asia Forest Team Leader said: “The Indonesian government must also take tough action against deforestation. It must protect our country's carbon rich peatland and rainforests as well as the reputation of the palm oil and paper industries by establishing a moratorium on forest destruction and full peatland protection. In order to make this happen Greenpeace will continue to pressure both the Indonesian government and the palm oil and paper industries that are causing biodiversity and climate devastation.”

Notes to editor:
(1) www.greenpeace.org/kitkat

Caught Red-Handed: How Nestlé’s Use of Palm Oil is Having a Devastating Impact on Rainforest, The Climate and Orang-utans at http://www.greenpeace.org/international/press/reports/caught-red-handed-how-Nestlé

(2)http://www.nestle.com/InvestorRelations/Events/AllEvents/Nestle_open_forum_on_deforestation_Malaysia.htm


(3) Sinar Mas has a long history of breaking its environmental promises, both in the palm oil and the pulp and paper sectors. It currently has 406,000 hectares of oil palm plantations and plans to develop another 1.3 million hectares for plantations in Papua and Kalimantan.
http://www.greenpeace.org/seasia/id/press/reports/new-evidence-sm-agm-Singapore

See satellite images and photographs in 'New Evidence Sinar Mas -- Rainforest and peatland destruction' Greenpeace, April 2010, at:
http://www.greenpeace.org/international/press/reports/newevidence
and Statement in GoldenAgri Resources, Enhancing Values, Enriching Lives, 2009 Annual report, page 39.
(4) FAO 2005. Global Forest Resources Assessment (FRA).
(5) WRI 2008: Climate Analysis Indicators Tool (CAIT) Version 6.0 (Washington, DC: World Resources Institute) http://cait.wri.org