Nestle Announces it Will Stop Using Ingredients like Palm Oil that Drive Deforestation
source: http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles/article_20860.cfm
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- julesrs007
- added this
Finally ... some good news! Today, Nestle, the world's biggest food and drinks company, announced that it will cease using products that drive the tropical rainforest destruction.
This is great news for our environment in what has otherwise been a bleak few weeks as
President Obama continues to dig in (or drill in) and stand firm behind his plans to increase offshore drilling...despite the BP Deepwater oil disaster AND continues to work to LIFT THE BAN on COMMERCIAL WHALING.
In Indonesia, palm oil and pulp plantations are both driving deforestation and pushing orangutans to the brink of extinction. After being caught red-handed, Nestle has committed to identify and exclude companies from its supply chain that own or manage "high-risk plantations or farms linked to deforestation."
This exclusion would apply to companies such as Sinar Mas, Indonesia's most notorious palm-oil and pulp-and-paper supplier, if it fails to meet the criteria set out in the policy.
It also has implications for palm oil traders, such as Cargill, which continue to buy from Sinar Mas. http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles/article_20860.cfm
http://www.greenpeace.org/usa/press-center/reports4/caught-red-handed-how-nestle
This is great news for our environment in what has otherwise been a bleak few weeks as
President Obama continues to dig in (or drill in) and stand firm behind his plans to increase offshore drilling...despite the BP Deepwater oil disaster AND continues to work to LIFT THE BAN on COMMERCIAL WHALING.
In Indonesia, palm oil and pulp plantations are both driving deforestation and pushing orangutans to the brink of extinction. After being caught red-handed, Nestle has committed to identify and exclude companies from its supply chain that own or manage "high-risk plantations or farms linked to deforestation."
This exclusion would apply to companies such as Sinar Mas, Indonesia's most notorious palm-oil and pulp-and-paper supplier, if it fails to meet the criteria set out in the policy.
It also has implications for palm oil traders, such as Cargill, which continue to buy from Sinar Mas. http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles/article_20860.cfm
http://www.greenpeace.org/usa/press-center/reports4/caught-red-handed-how-nestle
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