Environmental Panorama
International
March of 2012
Jakarta, Indonesia -
In the space of a week the National Geographic
Society (NGS) has publicly broken ties with
Asian Pulp and Paper (APP) and the Program
for the Endorsement of Forest Certification
(PEFC) has called for an investigation after
a Greenpeace report revealed the company
was illegally logging protected tree species.
WWF recently revealed that APP claims that
its operations were independently certified
as sustainable were not backed up by any
of the standard setting or certifying companies
it mentioned.
Greenpeace’s year long
investigation found that APP and suppliers
were cutting and pulping ramin trees, which
are legally protected under Indonesian law
as well as the Convention on International
Trade in Endangered Species.
The protected tree species were being illegally
logged and pulped at an APP mill in Sumatra
and Greenpeace has handed over its evidence
to Indonesian police who told the group
there would be an investigation.
Head of the Forests Campaign for Greenpeace
Indonesia, Bustar Maitar said, "Greenpeace
has caught Asian Pulp and Paper red-handed—this
investigation shows its main pulp mill is
regularly riddled with illegal ramin. This
makes a mockery of their public claim to
have a 'zero tolerance' for illegal timber."
Now PEFC has announced it is lodging an
official complaint against the certification
issued by SGS, a multinational corporation
that does certification work, to PT Indah
Kiat Pulp and Paper, an APP supplier. PEFC
has also called for an urgent investigation.
PEFC has been criticised by green groups
in the past for its certification of APP.
The world’s other major forestry certifier,
the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) dropped
APP in 2007 following a negative report
in the Wall Street Journal.
Part of the Greenpeace investigation involved
independent testing and supply chain research
into paper products from companies including
Xerox, National Geographic and Danone, showing
they contain Indonesian rainforest fibre.
In response to the revelations that APP
fibre was found in a National Geographic
coffee-table book, the NGS stated it had
not sourced from APP for “several years”.
A spokesman for NGS said, “We do not use
APP products in our current books. While
there may be a few books in our inventory
that were printed on APP paper, we no longer
use materials supplied by this company and
have not for several years.”
Greenpeace said it is “convinced” National
Geographic will not source from APP again.
For years the WWF, Greenpeace and other
similar groups have been tussling with APP,
targeting the paper brand for relying on
rainforest and peat land destruction for
its paper products, thus endangering wildlife
such as tigers and orang-utans, emitting
significant amounts of carbon and clashing
with local people.
Source:
WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
Press consultantship
All rights reserved
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