by Graeme » Mon 31 Mar 2014, 17:37:51
Greenpeace report on P&G's palm oil sources could spur industry change
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')ould Procter & Gamble taking steps to clean up its palm oil sourcing practices set an example for others to follow? Greenpeace thinks so. The NGO is using the lever of P&G's big name in an attempt to spur industry-wide change in the sourcing of palm oil. The campaign group recently concluded a year-long investigation into P&G's supply chain, looking at the source of the palm oil the multinational uses as an ingredient in its household brands such as Head & Shoulders shampoo and Gillette shaving gel. Greenpeace also launched a petition, since signed by more than 300,000 consumers globally, calling on P&G to improve its practices.
"If a well known company like Procter & Gamble can show leadership to clean up supply chains, we expect other companies will follow," said Bustar Maitar, global head of Greenpeace's Indonesia Forest Campaign.
Like 1,300 other companies from 50 countries, P&G is a member of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), a certification standard launched in 2004 to ensure that companies could continue to manufacture foods and personal products without cutting down tropical forests, thus destroying habitat for endangered animals and causing carbon dioxide emissions from the land-use change.
But thanks to opaque supply chains, the Roundtable is not actually preventing the destruction of forests and peatlands, according to a Greenpeace report published last fall.
"On the ground, we've seen lots of RSPO members still doing forest clearing in the area, which is an indication of weak enforcement and a weak standard," said Maitar. "RSPO, from my perspective, has been used for green washing by companies who want to expand their plantations into the forest."
While calling out P&G specifically via the petition, Greenpeace also published a related report that reviewed a range of multinational companies and their track records on this issue. The NGO cited another company as a leader: Nestlé.
In 2010, the multinational food corporation committed to a no deforestation policy, including 100% traceability. The company is currently implementing its policies and reporting its progress transparently, according to Greenpeace.
Duncan Pollard, Nestlé's head of stakeholder engagement in sustainability, said that deforestation is a complex issue, but "now we're seeing a wave of ambition to tackle this that is sweeping the industry."
theguardian
Human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe. H. G. Wells.
Fatih Birol's motto: leave oil before it leaves us.