Greenpeace ends 5-year truce with paper giant
BANGKOK — Greenpeace has ended a five-year truce with one of the world’s largest paper companies, accusing it of cutting down tropical forests in Indonesia during the entire time the two were cooperating on conservation.
The announcement Wednesday, triggered by an Associated Press investigation, abruptly ends a landmark 2013 agreement in which the environmental group suspended a global campaign against Indonesia’s Sinarmas and its Asia Pulp & Paper arm in exchange for commitments to end deforestation, land grabs and conflicts with local communities.
The campaign had linked the company’s destruction of forests in Indonesia to boxes used to package Barbie dolls, causing Sinarmas to hemorrhage important customers including Barbie maker Mattel, Xerox, Danone and KFC.
Following AP’s stories in December, Greenpeace said its own investigation, which included analysis of satellite imagery, showed that two companies connected to Sinarmas cleared almost 19,770 acres of forest and peatland on Borneo during the five years it was advising the family-owned conglomerate on forest conservation.
The evidence shows that Sinarmas is “not genuinely serious” about stopping deforestation in Indonesia, said Kiki Taufik, head of Greenpeace’s Indonesia forests campaign.
“The group must immediately come clean,” he said. “Stop the bulldozers and restore what was destroyed.”
“It’s only this action that can save APP and Sinarmas from further campaigns,” he said.
A statement released by Asia Pulp & Paper said it had worked over the past three months to address concerns and was “disappointed” with Greenpeace’s decision. It said the companies responsible for deforestation were not under its direct control.
“The fight against deforestation in Indonesia is a complex issue and not one any organization can resolve by themselves,” the statement said.
Indonesia is chopping down its rain forests faster than any other country, profiting paper and palm oil conglomerates while causing chronic social and environmental problems. Rapid forest loss and greenhouse gas emissions have made Indonesia the fourth biggest contributor to global warming after China, the U.S. and India.
The country’s emissions soared in 2015 when record dry season fires, worsened by draining of swampy peatland forests for plantations and El Niño weather conditions, burned 10,000 square miles of plantations and forests. The smoke blanketed much of Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia and southern Thailand in health-damaging haze that a Harvard and Columbia study estimated hastened 100,000 deaths.
AP’s investigation found extensive links between Sinarmas, its pulp and paper and forestry arms and nearly all the 27 plantation wood suppliers it had told the outside world were independent in an apparent attempt to greenwash its image.