18.11.09. While Greenpeace activists were detained by police
overnight for taking direct action on Thursday to prevent Asia Pacific
Resources International Holding Limited (APRIL) clearing Indonesia's
rainforest, UPM-Kymmene announced that it will stop buying from the
company (1), which is responsible for causing widespread rainforest and
climate destruction. (2)
(Media-Newswire.com) - Jakarta, Indonesia —
While Greenpeace activists were detained by police overnight for taking
direct action on Thursday to prevent Asia Pacific Resources
International Holding Limited ( APRIL ) clearing Indonesia's rainforest,
UPM-Kymmene announced that it will stop buying from the company ( 1 ),
which is responsible for causing widespread rainforest and climate
destruction. ( 2 )
The Greenpeace action took place as President
Barack Obama prepares to fly to Asia for the Asia-Pacific Economic
Cooperation ( APEC ), his first visit to the region as President, and as
the United States continues to block progress ahead of the critical UN
climate negotiations at Copenhagen next month.
The Finnish-owned
company, which supplies products like photocopy paper to global markets
including the US, China, Europe and Australia, admitted that APRIL’s
pulp “comes from a very delicate environment". Greenpeace estimates this
contract to be equal to over 4% of APRIL’s total pulp production, worth
over US$55 million annually. ( 3 )
“This is a very positive move by
UPM to help protect Indonesia’s rainforests and carbon rich peatlands,
the destruction of which is driving climate change, mass species
extinction and causing poverty in forest dependent communities,” said
Bustar Maitar, Greenpeace Southeast Asia’s rainforest campaigner.
“As
international companies start distancing themselves from this
environmental disaster, the call the end global deforestation here and
around the globe will only get louder and louder. It is not only one of
the quickest and most cost effective ways to combat climate change but
is essential in order to avert runway climate change in our
lifetime.”
Yesterday, activists from Indonesia, Philippines,
Thailand, Spain, Germany, Belgium, Brazil and Finland shut down APRIL’s
operations in the heart of the Indonesian rainforest on the island of
Sumatra. They locked themselves to seven machines used to clear vast
tracts of forest and peatland for conversion to pulp wood plantations.
Other activists unfurled a huge banner in a freshly destroyed area of
rainforest that read “Obama: you
can stop this”, urging him to join
other world leaders and help avert a climate crisis by ending global
deforestation, responsible for about a fifth of global greenhouse gas
emissions.
Earlier this week, Greenpeace released fresh evidence,
including aerial surveillance images that prove APRIL is
destroying areas of rainforest and draining forest peatland on
Sumatra’s threatened Kampar Peninsula. ( 4 ) The evidence also strongly
indicates that the company is clearing forest on peat which is more than
3 metres deep. This is illegal under Indonesian law.
Over a million
hectares of forest, mostly tropical rainforest, is destroyed every month
– that is an area of forest the size of a football pitch every two
seconds. Rainforest and peatland destruction in Indonesia emits such
huge quantities of CO2 that is has driven the country to become the
world's third largest climate polluter after China and the
US.
"President Obama, Yudhoyono and other world leaders must listen
and take action to pull us back from the brink of a climate crisis. They
must attend the UN climate summit and agree to a fair, ambitious and
binding deal that includes ending the destruction of the world’s
rainforests,” concluded Maitar. Notes to Editor
News on whether the activists will be charged will come later today.
Fuente: Media Newswire








