GERMANY PLEDGES ‘FORESTS FOR CLIMATE’ FUNDS


Environmental Panorama
International
May of 2008


28 May 2008 - Bonn, International — Today, at the UN Conference on Biological Diversity, being held in Bonn, the German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, pledged 500 million Euros over the next four years to help protect the world's forests. She also announced that from 2013 it will increase to 500 million Euros every year.
To remind Chancellor Merkel of the need for urgent action to protect what is left of the world's rainforests, early this morning Greenpeace activists set light to a five metre high tree stump, the remainder of a tree felled in the Amazon, on the River Rhine in Bonn. Stationed on a platform in the middle of the Rhine, near to where the UN conference is taking place, 50 Greenpeace activists, in ten inflatables, unfurled banners reading: "Forests are burning. Save the climate".

Shortly after, Merkel arrived to join other government leaders to attend the Ministerial discussions at the UN's biodiversity conference in Bonn. Representatives from 191 countries are trying to seal a deal that will help to preserve the world's plants, animals and natural resources and protect the climate.

Germany's announcement comes just one week after Greenpeace challenged G8 countries, including Germany, to provide more funding for forest protection. We argued that only by doing this would others believe that these countries' are serious about tackling climate change.

Greenpeace wants the money pledged to lead towards a legally-binding agreement for a global fund that could be used to halt deforestation. We launched our new proposal called 'Forests for Climate' at a press conference last week in Bonn. The concept behind the plan is quite simple. Rich countries, who have historically been the biggest polluters and contributors to climate change, would have to pay into the UN administered fund. The money would then be used to reward those developing countries that protect their rainforests. By putting in place this system of financial incentives, it is hoped that it will make economic sense for developing countries, like Brazil and Indonesia, to stop deforesting their land.

Greenpeace wants the mechanism to be part of the next phase of the Kyoto global climate deal to be implemented when the existing commitment period ends in 2012.

Of course, we can't afford to wait another four years for governments to act on deforestation. Deforestation is responsible for about a fifth of all global greenhouse emissions - that's more than the world's entire transport sector. If we are to have any hope of tackling climate change, action to stop the destruction of rainforests needs to happen right now.

That's why last week Greenpeace asked the German government, as hosts of the UN conference, to pledge 2 billion Euros each year until 2012 to plug the gap. This would mean that financial incentives for countries to protect their forests would be available right away.

Norway recently took the bold step of pledging two billion Euros over the next five years. While Germany's announcement today hasn't gone as far as Greenpeace wanted, the money they have pledged is certainly a step in the right direction. Now, we want other G8 members to follow suit and match or even exceed Germany's pledge.

Greenpeace estimates that between 20-27 billion Euros each year is needed to stop the destruction of the rainforests, save its animals and plants and to guarantee the rights of people living in the forests.

Brazil has already shown that it is possible to reduce the rate of deforestation. The country has lost more rainforest than any other country in the world. Yet between 2003 and 2006 the rate of deforestation declined in the Amazon. This was in part thanks to Greenpeace and other NGOs working together to help make sure that authorities could properly enforce protection measures in the Amazon. Having said this, in 2007 the rate of deforestation is on the increase again which only shows the importance of a sustained effort over a long period of time if measures to tackle this problem are to be effective.

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Nutella - Breakfast for Champions?
Football, Ferrero and Forests

28 May 2008 - Italy, International — The Italian football team apparently love nothing better than a nice dollop of Nutella spread over their bread for breakfast – “breakfast for champions” according to Nutella, the official sponsors for the national team. But what else do Nutella’s owners, the Italian company Ferrero – official sponsor of the entire Euro 2008 Championship - support?

Nutella – a hazelnut-based sweet spread - is immensely popular in Italy, as well as the rest of Europe and around the world. Its exact ingredients are, as you might expect, are a closely guarded secret, but according to two laboratories that analysed the spread for Greenpeace, it is composed of 31% vegetable oils, most of which is palm oil.

Aside from pushing species, such as the orang-utan of Borneo, Indonesia, to the brink of extinction, the destruction of the world’s rainforests and peatlands to make way for increased palm-oil plantations is driving climate change - every time the rainforest is trashed, huge amounts of greenhouse gases are released into the atmosphere. The destruction of rainforests accounts for a fifth of all greenhouse gas emissions – that’s more than all the planes, trains and automobiles in the world.

We sent along the “Borneo football team” – eleven orang-utans! – to explain. Arriving at the Italian squad’s official training centre, the orang-utans presented the footballers with an alternative “breakfast for champions” – a chocolate cream called Deforestazione Zero – and asked them to support our call for Zero Deforestation!

Greenpeace has been calling on Ferrero to declare its purchasing policy on palm oil, to assure us and its customers that Nutella is not being produced from palm oil that comes from deforestation. So far, we’ve had no positive news, which is why we’re asking the Italian national team to champion the cause.

Ferrero is a member of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), an international association which has been put in charge of making the palm oil sector more sustainable. Despite the fact that the RSPO has existed since 2002, there is still no certified palm oil on the market.

Greenpeace has produced a report, “The Hidden Carbon Liability of Indonesian Palm Oil”, which highlights the urgent need for global palm oil consumers and investors to support our call for an immediate moratorium on deforestation and peatland clearance in Indonesia.

One of the major companies using palm oil in its products is Unilever, which heads up the RSPO. Using Unilever's palm oil supply chains as a case study to help quantify the carbon liability and collateral risks associated with the Indonesian palm oil sector, the report shows how, by buying palm oil from suppliers who account for more than one-third of Indonesia's palm oil production, companies - including Ferrero and other major players such as Nestlé, Procter & Gamble and Kraft - are increasing their potential carbon liability and thus leaving investors exposed to potentially significant levels of hidden risk, compromising long-term financial and brand stability.

Following Greenpeace pressure, Unilever has recognised the global problems associated with palm oil expansion and the need for drastic reform to this sector. Unilever has taken a bold move in supporting our call for an immediate moratorium on deforestation and peatland clearance. While Unilever's position is strengthened by its status as the largest single palm oil consumer in the world, companies like Ferrero need to join with Unilever, support the moratorium and spread the call for a halt to deforestation.

 
 

Source: Greenpeace International
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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