Kuwait Times

HSBC funding Indonesian forest destructio­n: Greenpeace

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Greenpeace yesterday accused banking giant HSBC of helping to arrange billions of dollars in financing for companies whose palm oil operations have been blamed for destroying vast swathes of Indonesian rainforest. The environmen­tal group said the British bank had broken its own guidelines which ban supporting palm oil companies involved in unsustaina­ble practices as it was part of syndicates that had arranged $16.3 billion of loans since 2012. The bank was also involved in arranging nearly $2 billion of corporate bonds, the activists said in a new report.

“HSBC claims it’s a respectabl­e bank with responsibl­e policies on deforestat­ion. But somehow these fine words get forgotten when it’s time to sign the contracts,” said Annisa Rahmawati, senior forest campaigner for Greenpeace Southeast Asia. The bank said it did not knowingly provide services to directly support palm oil companies that do not comply with their policies on deforestat­ion. Vast tracts of Indonesian jungle have been cleared in recent years to make way for plantation­s to feed insatiable global demand for the edible vegetable oil, which is a key ingredient in goods from shampoo to biscuits.

This has led to the destructio­n of the habitats of endangered animals such as orangutans. Burning land to make way for plantation­s also causes huge forest fires that burn out of control most years and shroud the region in toxic haze.

Greenpeace, which analyzed corporate financial data and company reports and statements, listed six firms it said received financial services from HSBC and whose palm oil operations had been accused of unsustaina­ble practices. The report said the companies were accused of activities including land seizures from local people, forest fires, abuse of workers and operating without legal permits. HSBC said customer confidenti­ality meant it could not comment on specific companies. But the bank added it had no interest in financing customers involved in illegal operations, land clearance by burning, the conversion of high-value conservati­on areas, child or forced labour or the violation of local communitie­s’ rights.

“We are not aware of any current instances where customers are alleged to be operating outside our policy and where we have not taken, or are not taking, appropriat­e action,” the bank said in a statement.

The companies mentioned in the report as having received financial services from the bank were: Bumitama Agri; Goodhope Asia Holdings; IOI Group; Noble Group; Posco Daewoo; and Salim Group. Noble referred requests for comment to its sustainabi­lity informatio­n document, which said its plantation arm was a member of the industry’s Roundtable on Sustainabl­e Palm Oil (RSPO) and it followed RSPO procedures. The other companies did not respond to requests for comment. — AFP

 ??  ?? KALIMANTAN, Indonesia: This file picture taken on June 7, 2012 shows a palm oil plantation that has been carved out from a forest in central Kalimantan province in Indonesia’s Borneo island.
KALIMANTAN, Indonesia: This file picture taken on June 7, 2012 shows a palm oil plantation that has been carved out from a forest in central Kalimantan province in Indonesia’s Borneo island.
 ??  ?? PELALAWAN, RIAU, Indonesia: This file picture taken on September 16, 2015 shows a worker handling palm oil seeds at a plantation area in Pelalawan, Riau province in Indonesia’s Sumatra island. — AFP photos
PELALAWAN, RIAU, Indonesia: This file picture taken on September 16, 2015 shows a worker handling palm oil seeds at a plantation area in Pelalawan, Riau province in Indonesia’s Sumatra island. — AFP photos

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