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Greenpeace Responds to Sinar Mas ‘Verification Exercise’

Jakarta, Indonesia – The Sinar Mas audit largely confirms Greenpeace findings. It shows that Sinar Mas has been clearing forests and peat lands. Also it confirms that the company has been operating without the necessary permits and has been clearing deep peat illegally.

“The Sinar Mas spin is a poor attempt at brand protection that does nothing to challenge Greenpeace’s findings. We’ve repeatedly shown that Sinar Mas says one thing and does another. They destroy peat-land and call it water management. They clear rainforests and say that they’re developing degraded land,” said Bustar Maitar, Greenpeace Southeast Asia Forest Team Leader.

“But instead of acting on our findings, which conclusively prove Sinar Mas destroys rainforests and peat-lands, they’re trying to green-wash their image,” he said.
 
Between 2007 and July 2010 (1), Greenpeace International released a series of reports exposing the impact of the Sinar Mas Group’s pulp, paper and oil palm divisions on climate, forests, peat-lands, and tiger and orangutan habitats. Geenpeace’s investigations, as recent as July 2010, have shown Sinar Mas continuing to clear mapped forest and peat-land, breaching its own company policy even while this current audit was underway.

Sinar Mas recently announced plans to expand its current oil palm plantation area (of 430,000 hectares by another 100,000 ha) in Kalimantan (2). While claiming to expand only on ‘degraded lands’ (3), the reality of the last years has shown that it relentlessly destroys forests, including areas critical for orangutan survival and carbon-rich peat-lands.  As a result, key corporate customers, including Unilever, Nestlé, Kraft, Carrefour and many others, have now stopped buying from Sinar Mas (4). 

The Indonesian Government must stop groups like Sinar Mas wrecking forests and driving climate change. The Indonesian Government must ensure that the proposed moratorium includes a halt to all forest clearance, including clearance within existing concessions, and ensures immediate protection of all peat-lands. And corporate consumers must ensure they are not funding this destruction by dropping Sinar Mas’ products from their shelves and supply chains.



Notes:


(2) Brown, K (2010); ‘Palm Oil Chief Defends Environmental Record’, Financial Times, London, 19 July 2010; http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/3fc33566-935b-11df-bb9a-00144feab49a.html; and Creagh, Sunanda (2010); ‘SMART Eyes Palm Oil Expansion in Kalimantan’; Reuters 5 August 2010; http://uk.reuters.com/article/idUKTRE6742A520100805

(3) ‘Palm Oil Chief Defends Environmental Record’ Financial Times, London, 19 July 2010.

(4) Deutsch, A (2010); ‘Greenpeace Fires Salvo Over Paper Producer’; Financial Times, London, 5 July 2010; http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/fc4a3b4a-8801-11df-a4e7-00144feabdc0.html?ftcamp=rss



Source: Greenpeace Press Release dated August 10, 2010.