Responsible palm oil use campaign

Rainforest Action Network (RAN) has announced a new national campaign that aims to remove “Conflict Palm Oil” from America’s snack foods by convincing major food companies to implement responsible palm oil policies.

A protest at Chicago’s Board of Trade publicly named the 20 snack food companies that RAN’s campaign will focus on. The Snack Food 20, as the group has dubbed them, control some of America’s most well known household brands including Pepsi, Heinz, Hershey’s, Kraft and Smuckers.

“In the 21st Century customers don’t want to buy crackers and cookies that are responsible for pushing the world’s last wild orangutans to extinction and for horrifying child labor violations. That’s why Rainforest Action Network is putting these top 20 snack food companies using ‘Conflict Palm Oil’ on notice that it’s time to develop responsible policies and create products that reflect the values of their customers and the needs of our planet,” said Lindsey Allen, executive director of Rainforest Action Network.

A new report, entitled Conflict Palm Oil: How US Snack Food Brands are Contributing to Orangutan Extinction, Climate Change and Human Rights Violations , which details and exposes the increasingly severe environmental and human rights problems caused by palm oil production has also been released. The report finds that none of the Snack Food 20 companies can verifiably ensure that their products do not contain palm oil connected to rainforest destruction, carbon pollution and human rights abuses. It also concludes the Snack Food 20 have the market influence to engage their supply chains and make demands of major palm oil traders like Cargill with the leverage to transform the destructive way palm oil producers currently grow Conflict Palm Oil.

In addition to the report, dozens of activists with Rainforest Action Network held a protest outside the Chicago Board of Trade, which is a primary trading center for agricultural commodities including palm oil. The group unfurled a 15-foot banner reading, “Cut Conflict Palm Oil, Not Rainforests,” and several supporters wore orangutan masks and held signs displaying the logos of many of America’s most popular snack food brands.

“Palm oil is found in nearly 50% of the packaged foods on our grocery store shelves, and tragically it is also the leading cause of orangutan extinction and rainforest destruction in Indonesia and Malaysia. The Snack Food 20 can and must solve their problem with Conflict Palm Oil before it’s too late for the great red ape,” said Gemma Tillack, Rainforest Action Network’s senior agribusiness campaigner. “Rainforest Action Network has developed a clear roadmap for companies to follow to eliminate Conflict Palm Oil from their products, and we are ready and willing to work with the Snack Food 20 now to make it happen.”

Palm oil is one of the world’s leading causes of rainforest destruction and its use in the US has grown nearly 500% in the past decade. This rapidly growing demand has pushed palm oil plantations into the heart of some of the world’s most culturally and biologically diverse ecosystems. Palm oil is among the biggest threats driving iconic wildlife species like the orangutan to the brink of extinction in Indonesia and Borneo Malaysia. Scientists estimate just 60,600 orangutans remain in the wild.

This large-scale destruction of rainforests and carbon-rich peatland landscapes is releasing globally significant quantities of carbon pollution into the atmosphere, making palm oil a major global driver of human induced climate change. Annual carbon emissions related to deforestation in Indonesia alone – most of which stem from palm oil plantation expansion – are greater than all the cars, trucks, planes and ships in the US combined.

The production of palm oil is also responsible for widespread human rights violations as palm oil companies often forcefully remove indigenous peoples and rural communities from their lands. The US Department of Labor lists palm oil from Indonesia and Malaysia as commodities associated with child labor and modern day slavery. A July article in Bloomberg BusinessWeek reported the results of a nine-month investigation by the Schuster Institute of Investigative Journalism that documented widespread cases of child labour on palm oil plantations associated with the supply chains of the Snack Food 20.

The “Snack Food 20” group of companies are Campbell Soup Company; ConAgra Foods, Inc.; Dunkin’ Brands Group, Inc.; General Mills, Inc.; Grupo Bimbo; Hillshire Brands Company; H.J. Heinz Company; Hormel Foods Corporation; Kellogg Company; Kraft Food Group, Inc.; Krispy Kreme Doughnuts Corp.; Mars Inc.; Mondelez International, Inc.; Nestle. S.A.; Nissin Foods Holdings Co., Ltd.; PepsiCo, Inc.; The Hershey Company; The J.M. Smucker Company; Toyo Suisan Kaisha, Ltd.; and Unilever.

The full Conflict Palm Oil report can be downloaded here: http://ran.org/conflict-palm-oil

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