|
|
- Info
0923
press release
Photos and footage available
Full report online at:
www.foe.co.uk/resource/reports/oil_for_ape_full.pdf
orang-utans face extinction as rainforest
destroyed for palm oil
© Orangutan
Foundation
|
JAKARTA (INDONESIA) / LONDON (UK),
23 September, 2005 -- The Orang-utan is
facing extinction due to the
destruction of rainforest in Indonesia
and Malaysia to set up oil-palm
plantations, new research reveals.
The ‘Oil for Ape Scandal', published
today September 23 by Friends of the
Earth and the world's leading
orang-utan conservation groups,
concludes that without urgent
intervention the palm oil trade could
cause the extinction of Asia's only
great ape within 12 years [1].
Palm oil is found in many products
on supermarket shelves, from bread to
margarine, lipstick and soap.
Despite being warned for years by
environmental groups that oil-palm
plantations are associated with
rainforest destruction and human rights
abuses, the report finds that most UK
companies don't even know where their
palm oil comes from.
|
The report finds that almost 90 percent of
orang-utan habitat in Indonesia and Malaysia
has now been destroyed. Some experts estimate
that 5,000 orang-utan perish as a result
every year. The researchers found that
oil-palm plantations have now become the
primary cause of the orang-utans' decline,
wiping out its rainforest home in Borneo and
Sumatra .
New evidence shows that orang-utan rescue
centres in Indonesia are over-flowing with
orphaned baby orang-utans rescued from
forests being cleared to make way for
oil-palm plantations. The Indonesian
Government is now planning to convert a large
part of Tanjung Puting National Park , the
world's most famous protected area for
orang-utan, into an oil-palm plantation.
Research in the UK by Friends of the Earth
found that at least 84 per cent of UK
companies are failing to take effective
action to ensure they do not buy palm oil
from destructive sources and not one single
UK supermarket knows where the palm oil
originates in the products it sells.
The story of corporate failure on palm oil is
repeated across Europe . The European Union
is the world's biggest buyer of palm oil.
Two weeks ago the United Nations published
the Kinshasa Declaration, an action plan
backed by the UK Government to save the
world's great apes from extinction [2]. The
Indonesian Government signed on to this
agreement but so far the Malaysian Government
has failed to do so.
Friends of the Earth and the orang-utan
conservation groups are urging both
governments to adopt and implement the
declaration and end the conversion of
orang-utan habitat into oil-palm
plantations.
They also say that the failure of European
companies to take action shows that they
cannot be trusted to act responsibly. They
are calling on European Governments and the
European Commission to legislate to stop
European companies acting in such a damaging
way.
Ian Redmond, Chairman of the Ape Alliance,
said:
“Governments that provide a market for palm
oil must legislate to make their corporations
responsible and accountable for their
impacts. If not, it is we who will have
to explain to our children that the
orang-utan became extinct, not because of a
lack of knowledge, but because of corporate
greed and a lack of political will.”
Rully Syumanda of WALHI/friends of the earth
Indonesia said:
"We cannot win the battle to save the
Indonesian rainforest while companies in
consuming countries continue to buy palm oil
from sources linked to human rights abuse and
species extinction. The Governments of these
countries must legislate and force these
companies to stop acting so
destructively."
Research by Friends of the Earth shows that
the forest fires which ravaged the island of
Sumatra in August, and continue to burn
today, were mostly set by palm oil companies
clearing land to set up their
plantations. It is estimated that one
third of the orang-utan population on Borneo
was killed by the forest fires of 1998.
Dr Willie Smits, Founder of the Borneo
Orangutan Survival Foundation, aid: “The rate
of loss of orang-utan has never been greater
than in the last three years, and oil- palm
plantations are mostly to blame.”
Professor Biruté Galdikas, founder of the
Orangutan Foundation International, said:
“The orang-utan is endangered because of
habitat loss. Today the greatest threat to
orang-utan habitat is the continued expansion
of oil-palm plantations. Palm oil is the
greatest enemy of orang-utan and their
continued survival in the wild."
Dr Ian Singleton, Scientific Director for
the Sumatran Orangutan Conservation
Programme, said:
“We have already lost huge areas of
orang-utan habitat and tens of thousands of
orang-utan to the palm oil
industry. Now there are reports of an
“oil-palm fence” which will stretch 845
kilometres along the border with Malaysia in
Borneo , crossing through orang-utan habitat.
The problem is truly immense.”
for more information
:
In Jakarta, Indonesia, Rully Syumanda of
WALHI/Friends of the Earth Indonesia, Tel:
+62 21 794 1672 Mobile: +62 813 1771 2909 or
email
roelly@walhi.or.id
In London, UK, press office of Friends of
the Earth:
+44-20 7566 1649 or email email:
helenby@foe.co.uk
PICTURES of orang-utan can be downloaded
from:
http://www.foe.co.uk/resource/images/orangutan_report/
FOOTAGE (Broadcast quality) of orang-utans
and oil palm plantations is available from
the press office at Friends of the Earth with
thanks to the Orangutan Foundation.
Interviews with leading orang-utan
scientists and campaigners are available.
notes
[1] The report, The Oil for Ape Scandal –
How palm oil is threatening the orang-utan,
is published by Friends of the Earth together
with the Orangutan Foundation, the Borneo
Orangutan Survival Foundation and the
Sumatran Orangutan Society as members of the
Ape Alliance. For a copy of the summary or
full report please go to:
Summary:
www.foe.co.uk/resource/reports/oil_for_ape_summary.pdf
Full report:
www.foe.co.uk/resource/reports/oil_for_ape_full.pdf
[2] The Kinshasa Declaration on Great Apes
was signed on 9th September 2005 . The
signatories included range states for great
apes as well as the European Commission and
the following donor countries: Belgium ,
France , Italy , Sweden , United Kingdom and
the United States
|
|
|
|
-
Journalists: For media inquires contact Niccolo Sarno, FoEI media coordinator.

Tel: +31-20-6221369 (Office landline in Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
If you wish to receive our press releases by email please contact media [at] foei.org
FoEI is looking for a media intern or volunteer!
We are looking for volunteers with one to three days a week to spare to assist our media coordinator in Amsterdam.
If you're interested please email media[at]foei.org
|