Forest defenders target snack foods, cosmetics
source: http://us.oneworld.net/article/081508-forest-defenders-target-snack-foods-cosmetics
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- goldenways
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Major players in the food and cosmetics industries are coming under heavy pressure from environmental activists to stop manufacturing and selling products that contain palm oil.
"Companies like Hostess and Nestle are perpetuating rainforest destruction and human rights abuses by using palm oil in their products," said Leila Salazar-Lopez of the San Francisco-based Rainforest Action Network (RAN).
On Tuesday, Salazar-Lopez's group led a series of demonstrations targeting supermarkets in a number of major cities and towns across the nation, including Austin, Boston, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, New York, and San Francisco.
The demonstrators demanded supermarkets apply stickers reading, "Warning! Product May Contain Rainforest Destruction" on any item that contains palm oil, an ingredient that is widely used in food and cosmetics products.
Researchers say that increasing worldwide demand for palm oil is driving the construction of plantations in the tropical forests of Indonesia, Malaysia, and Papua New Guinea.
These forests are disappearing at the rate of 2.5 million acres every year due to clear cutting to make way for palm oil plantations. Scientists warn that the continued construction of plantations in the tropical jungles can have disastrous consequences for the global environment.
Indonesia's tropical forests are considered some of the world's great carbon sinks and hence a solid source of defense in the fight against global warming.
Peat lands in the province of Riau on the island of Sumatra, for example, have the capacity to store over 14 billion tons of carbon -- roughly one year's global greenhouse gas emissions. But that is changing fast as commercial concerns continue to move in.
The environmental group Greenpeace claims that, due to palm oil plantation growth, about 25 percent of the peat forests in Riau have already disappeared, and there is so far no indication that the remaining ones will be shown any mercy.
Forest destruction is considered responsible for about one fifth of global greenhouse gas emissions. Greenpeace research links 4 percent of annual global emissions to the damage caused by palm oil companies to peat forests in Indonesia.**continues**
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- News, News and Politics, Green, Environment, 11 more
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shroomfairy
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From the website:
The "Dirty 20"
Be on the lookout for the following brands! Many of their products contain palm oil. Just be sure to check the label and look for "palm oil", "palm kernel oil", "palm fruit oil" or "palmitate". Then you’ll know they contain rainforest destruction!
1. Balance Bar Company
2. Bath and Body Works
3. Cadbury
4. Campbell Soup Company
5. Clif Bar
6. Dreyer's Grand Ice Cream
7. Elizabeth Arden Inc.
8. Heinz
9. Keebler
10. Kiss My Face Cosmetics
11. Land O Lakes
12. L’Oreal
13. Mrs. Fields
14. Nabisco Inc.
15. Newman's Own
16. Organic Valley
17. Pepperidge Farms
18. The Body Shop
19. Tom’s of Maine
20. Whole Foods Market Inc.Ok, #20 is very surprising!
- 3 years ago
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shroomfairy
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superfinet
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I like the idea - it is eye opening to the consumer... An alarmist approach to making people aware... I am totally against deforestation, not only for applications of palm oil, but the number one rain forest deforestation reason (at least in S. America) SOY Beans!!! Soy may be good and all for people's health, but the same thing goes for it & palm oil - don't cut down valuable life-sustaining regions of earth just to make a buck! it is wrong and unethical. We should use what our earth-creator has given us and be happy; we don't have to be bastardous children and hack down everything in sight just to make money - there have to be better alternatives to these methods of obtaining the products they insist on selling... Ridiculous!
- 3 years ago
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superfinet
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extblues
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I really like these "sticker bomb" projects as a method of direct action. They're reasonably inexpensive to make in large numbers, easy to apply on just about anything you can think of, and it doesn't deface or destroy anything of consequence save a container that is either going to be discarded or recycled anyway.
Kudos folks...
- 3 years ago
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extblues
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HiImGuss
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Thanks for that! =]
- 3 years ago
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HiImGuss
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shroomfairy
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I want some stickers! Cool!
- 3 years ago
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shroomfairy
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jimenagamio
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This is good news. More people should stand up to major food industrires. Bring on the stickers!
- 3 years ago
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jimenagamio
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HiImGuss
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I want me some of those stickers!
- 3 years ago
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HiImGuss
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onechance
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RAD. I need some damn stickers. How do I get em!?
- 3 years ago
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onechance
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Vierotchka
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This is a very important issue. I get my palm oil from places that do not destroy forests for planting palms. Places such as Sri Lanka and East African countries.
- 3 years ago
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Vierotchka
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huntre
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Vierotchka:
Stop that. No. Wait. Really? ;o)
- 3 years ago
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huntre
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Vierotchka
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Vierotchka:
Yes, really. :)
I get palm oil from fairness shops and from health food shops. The origin of this oil is well known and on the labels. :)
- 3 years ago
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Vierotchka
