Search     
Register / Login    
Wetlands for water and life

Global news

Current Articles | Search | RSS Feeds

23-Jun-2009

Wetlands International in a coalition of environmental groups (see below) has accused a British company of funding the imminent destruction of a critical area of Indonesian rainforest for palm oil production.

Hundreds of endangered Orangutans at risk; vital coastal buffer zone under threat.

The groups claim that, if allowed to proceed, the process would destroy a fragile tsunami buffer zone (1) as well as accelerate global climate change.

The Scottish firm Jardine Matheson Holdings is the majority shareholder of AAL, the palm oil company behind plans to decimate the untouched forests of Tripa in Aceh Province, northern Sumatra. Jardine’s chairman, Sir Henry Keswick, was knighted this month in the Queen’s birthday honours list.

Turning a blind eye

The environmental coalition – including groups such as the Sumatran Orangutan Society , Wetlands International, Orang-Utan land trust and Greenpeace – accused the firm of turning a blind eye to a massive rainforest crime and driving the destruction of an entire ecosystem.

The region, on the northwestern coast of Sumatra, is home to the highest concentration of Sumatran orangutans in the world. Less than twenty years ago the Tripa swamp forests harboured around 1,500 orangutans. Today there are just a handful left.

Contributing to climate change

The dense peat swamp soils also house a huge store of buried carbon, which will be released into the atmosphere and contribute to climate change if the planned conversion of this area to palm oil plantations goes ahead. The 13,000 hectare plot also provides a critical forest barrier against natural disasters such as the 2004 tsunami, which killed more than 225,000 people.

Quotes:

Alex Kaat from Wetlands International:

“This case in unfortunately just one example. Throughout Indonesia and Malaysia, we see that the last remaining peatswamp forests are cleared for palm oil production to meet the growing demands for vegetable oils and biofuels.”

Greenpeace forest campaigner James Turner said:

“It’s scandalous that a British company is bankrolling the destruction of this vital part of Indonesian rainforest. If the executives at Jardines don’t stop this they will be rightly accused of speeding up climate change, destroying a vital tsunami buffer zone and driving the Sumatran orangutan to the brink of extinction.”

Helen Buckland, UK Director, Sumatran Orangutan Society (SOS):

“It is frankly shocking that the Chairman of Jardine Matheson has been knighted for services to British business interests overseas, while his company is actively contributing to the demise of the critically endangered Sumatran orangutan. British businesses must be held accountable for their part in the destruction of this globally important area of forest. “

Michelle Desiliets, Director of the Orang-Utan land trust:

“The crisis facing Tripa Swamp Forest demonstrates just how ruthless this industry can be. A UK-based company, chaired by an individual recently knighted for services to British business interests overseas and charitable activities in the UK, provides the investment for such destruction, and as such, surely cannot claim to have any interest in Corporate Social Responsibility.”

Denis Ruysschaert from PanEco:

“The latest Tripa monitoring flight, on 11 June 2009, showed a gloomy picture of the on-going destruction, worse than expected”.

For more information,

please contact Wetlands International on

+31 (0)318 660912

+31 (6) 50601917 (mobile)

Alex.kaat@wetlands.org

 

FOOTNOTES

(1) A 2005 post-tsunami master plan for the rehabilitation and reconstruction for the region and people of the province of Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam and Nias Island, agreed by the Indonesian people and authorities, emphasises the need for the development of a coastal greenbelt buffer zone.

                

    Youtube     Twitter      RSS Feeds      Social bookmarking

Subscribe to our press releases

If you want to subscribe to our press releases, please enter your name and email address below and click "Submit"

Enter the code shown above:

Media Contact

Press can contact:
Communications Manager, Alex Kaat
alex.kaat@wetlands.org
+31 (0)318 660910
+31 (0)6 50601917 (cell phone)

News from our offices

Wetlands International Africa
Atelier d'information et de sensibilisation des acteurs de l'eau pour une meilleure prise en compte de la GIRE dans la mise en oeuvre des PDSEC
Les 13 et 14 janvier 2010, s’est tenu dans la salle de conférence de l’Office Riz...
2/9/2010 4:12:00 PM
Wetlands International Africa
Lancement du demo project WLP au Mali
Le jeudi 7 janvier 2010, dans la salle de conférence de l’Assemblée Régionale, s’...
2/9/2010 4:00:00 PM
Wetlands International Africa
Lancement officiel des activités du PRCM en Sierra Léone : pari tenu !
C'est le ministre sierra-léonais des Affaires présidentielles et publiques, S.E.M...
1/28/2010 5:23:00 PM
Wetlands International Africa
Les mangroves de Guinée-Bissau, un exemple dans la lutte contre les effets du changement climatique
Mansoa, Guinée-Bissau. Le gouvernement bissau - guinéen a procédé au lancement du...
1/15/2010 11:27:00 AM
Wetlands International Africa
Copenhague : plaidoyer du Prcm en faveur du littoral mauritanien
Le pavillon mauritanien au sommet de Copenhague a connu ses moments d'animat...
12/17/2009 4:18:00 PM
Wetlands International Africa
Copenhague : Les africains font monter la pression pour que vive le protocole de Kyoto
Suite à la suspension de la participation du groupe Afrique  aux travaux de ...
12/15/2009 12:03:00 PM
Wetlands International Africa
" Participer à Copenhague depuis chez soi "
leadinafrica.org/leadafricacop15onlive/LEAD Africa / ENDA organise, d’une manière...
12/7/2009 10:47:00 AM

 

Contact Us    News    Projects   Publications     Videos    Offices    Jobs    RSS Feeds   Youtube         Ramsar Site Information Service 

Wetlands International Headquarters. Horapark 9, 6717 LZ Ede. The Netherlands. Tel: +31 (0) 318-660910 Fax: +31 (0) 318-660950

Reg. No. 09099028 Bank.no. 50.75.04.127 Swift code: ABNANL2A IBAN: NL51BNA507504127
 

Copyright Wetlands International 2007   Terms Of Use  Privacy Statement