:. Food Industry News


Snacks Light Fuse of Indonesian 'Forest Bomb', Says Greenpeace

Source: Reuters
08/11/2007

Singapore, Nov 8 - Indonesia's peatland forests are a ticking "climate bomb" and Kit Kats, Pringles and other palm oil-based products are lighting the fuse, global conservation group Greenpeace said on Thursday.

Daily News Alerts

Clearing forests that grow on the country's thick carbon-storing peatland releases more than a billion tonnes of greenhouse gases a year, the group said at the unveiling of its "Cooking the Climate" report in Singapore.

"A handful of international corporations are ultimately responsible for slashing and burning Indonesia's peatlands," said Emmy Hafild, executive director of Greenpeace Southeast Asia.

"Some of the best-known brands are literally cooking the climate".

Greenpeace estimates that peatlands in Riau Province, on Sumatra island, store the equivalent of one year's global greenhouse emissions -- an estimated 14.6 billion tonnes of carbon.

About three million hectares (7.5 million acres) of these peatland forests are earmarked for conversion to palm oil plantations over the next decade, Greenpeace said.

This "climate bomb" is ticking loudly in the run-up to December's United Nations' climate change meeting in Bali, which is expected to debate forests' role in accelerating -- and slowing -- climate change, said Sue Connor, Greenpeace International Forests Campaigner.

"(If the Riau peatlands are cleared) it would wipe out any chance we have of keeping the temperature increase below two degrees Celsius," she said, referring to a threshold given by the UN's climate panel.

Palm oil is used in anything from body lotions and toothpaste to chocolate bars, crisps and as a component of biofuels, such as biodiesel.

It is the world's second most popular edible oil after soyoil.

FUEL FOR CRITICS

The report names multinationals such as Unilever, Nestle and Procter & Gamble, the makers of brands such as Flora margarine, Ben & Jerry's ice cream and Kit Kat chocolate bars.

Greenpeace says the companies are implicated in causing rainforest destruction in Southeast Asia.

But just as fans of the companies' chocolate bars and ice creams might not realise their snacks' global environmental impact, the companies were often also in the dark, Connor said.

While the link between peatland clearance and carbon emissions is well established, opaque global supply chains and lack of forest law enforcement in Indonesia make it impossible for end-users to guarantee their oil has come from plantations on legally cleared peat forests.

Greenpeace's recent investigation in Riau found one of Indonesia's ten-largest palm oil refiners, Duta Palma, had violated Indonesian law by clearing trees growing on peat deeper than the limit of three metres (10 feet) set by presidential decree, Connor said.

"The palm oil industry is out of control," she said.

"There's no way for the end user to know whether the oil comes from destructive sources or not... None of the oil is segregated by traders."

Even companies that are members of industry watchdog the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), whose goal is to verify sustainably grown palm oil, cannot be certain of the provenance of the product they are buying, she said.

"At the moment there is no certified oil. The rules are very weak."

Some of the companies named in the report are RSPO members.

Unilever, for example, is president of the board.

"Unilever was one of the founders of the RSPO -- an industry-led initiative set up in co-operation with the conservation organisation WWF in 2003," the company says on its Web site.

Procter & Gamble isn't a member.

"We have not yet come up with a way to measure the sustainability of renewable materials or crops, such as wheat, coffee or palm oil," the company says on its Web site.

With no way of ascertaining the environmental costs of palm-oil based supermarket snackfoods or biofuels, Greenpeace recommended a moratorium on palm oil plantations.

"(Biofuel) will drive not only our cars," said Connor. "It will drive climate change."

"It's like throwing petrol on a fire to put it out. It's really just making it worse."



GO   View more articles on this subject

Email This Article To A Colleague     Print A Copy Of This Page
 
 
 
 
FLEXNEWS - Business News for the Food Industry

About Us | Contact Us | Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy
 
Daily News Alerts
Related Items
Indonesia Sees '09 Palm Oil Output of 19.4 Million...
Indonesian State Plantation Firm Eyes $220 Million...
Indonesia's Astra Agro H1 Profit More Than Doubles
Indonesia's Astra Agro Says H1 CPO Sales Up 20 pct
Indonesia May End Cooking Oil, Soybean Subsidies
Indonesia to Boost Palm Oil Production with Extra 4...
Indonesia Adopts Stringent "Green" Palm Oil...
Some Indonesia Cocoa Plantations Switching to Oil Palms...
Wilmar Raises Stake in Cahaya Kalbar to 87.02% from...
Sainsbury's Pledges to Use Sustainable Palm Oil to...

More in Food Industry News
Cargill Fails in US$10 Million Damages Claim Against...
Wal-Mart Canada Cuts Staple Food Prices in Ontario
Danone Near Exiting India Venture with Wadia - Report
Danone Says No Decision Yet Made over Sale of its ...
InBev Announces Successful Completion of Primary Syndication...
Indonesia Says Food Stocks to Ease Inflation Pressure
Remy Cointreau Sees Asian Echo to U.S. Downturn
Wimm-Bill-Dann Foods Announces 30% Revenue Growth in...
Belgian Nuclear Authorities Alert the Commission about...
Haisheng Announces 2008 Interim Results

Top Headlines
Crystalline Lactosucrose or Syrup Containing Crystalline...
Sucrase Activity Inhibitor, Glucoamylase Activity Inhibitor...
Low Trans Puff Pastry Composition, Method of Use and...
Method for the Manufacturing of Soy and Milk Protein-Based...
Edible Oil Composition Suitable for Frying Food
Belgian Nuclear Authorities Alert the Commission about...
ISO Sees 2008/09 Global Sugar Deficit of 3.9 Million...
EU Increases Refunds on Periodic Sugar Exports
Jamba, Inc. Reports US$89 Million Loss In Q2 2008 Results
India's Premium Rice Production Up, Farmers Eye Exports...
Indonesia's Indofood H1 Profit More than Doubles
Salmonella Outbreak Over: US Centre for Disease Control...
Carrefour: Solid Sales Growth and Activity Contribution...
Starbucks Says More Discounts, Promotions Coming
Pernod to Pay US$230 Million To Fortune to End Venture;Disposal...
Diageo, Brown-Forman Hurt by Weak European Economy
EU to Appeal WTO Ruling on Banana Import Regime
PepsiCo and The Pepsi Bottling Group Complete Acquisition...
China: Macau Eliminates Tax on Wine and Beer
Sainsbury Shares Surge on Renewed Takeover Talk
Brown-Forman First Quarter Earnings Per Share Down...
Canadian Food Safety Regime at Fault for Listeria Outbreak...
Del Monte Foods Q1 2009 Results; Sales Up; US$8 Million...
Troubled Coffee Chain Beanscene on Brink of Being Sold
Clearly Canadian Brands Announces Q2 2008 Results
France's Entremont Reaches Deal with Milk Farmers
Olam International Hails FY2008 as a Milestone Year...
Isomalt in Cereal Products


 


FLEXNEWS 2008 - All rights reserved
ISSN 1950-6228