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Cargill to engage Indonesian supplier after audit confirms forest destruction mongabay.com August 27, 2010
The company, PT Smart (SMART), and its owner Golden Agri-Resources, earlier this month tried to spin the audit to claim that it cleared the company of environmental wrongdoing but were quickly rebuked by one of the auditors involved in the investigation. The Ranforest Action Network (RAN), an activist group campaigning against unsustainable palm oil, subsequently used the episode to pressure Cargill on its earlier commitment to drop SMART as a supplier if it was found to be engaged in forest destruction and did not clean up its operations. On Thursday, RAN issued a statement accusing Cargill of breaking its promise to end its relationship with Sinar Mas, the conglomerate that controls PT Smart and Golden Agri-Resources. "Despite this announcement making clear Sinar Mas' culpability for rainforest destruction, Cargill is failing to keep its promise, which was to drop Sinar Mas as a supplier if the company was found to be destroying rainforests," RAN said in the press release. But on Friday, Cargill rejected RAN's claim, saying the environmental group was "misrepresenting" the agricultural giant's position.
"Since the allegations were originally made by Greenpeace about PT SMART, Cargill has consistently stated that if the allegations were proven correct and PT SMART did not take corrective action we would delist it as a supplier." Eich said Cargill is "encouraged PT SMART has acknowledged areas of non-compliance with the RSPO and its own company policies" and "that it has committed to taking corrective actions and to strengthening its standard operating procedures to address these." "SMART has committed to rectify the issue, identified in their audit, and getting all their plantations RSPO certified by 2015. We will be speaking with PT SMART and Golden Agri-Resources to understand in more detail their plans and timeframe for implementing corrective actions. We look forward to seeing progress by them on their commitments." The audit found that SMART failed to conduct environmental impact assessments on eight of the 11 concessions audited. The activity violated Indonesian law, internal policies, and rules under the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), a certification standard. The audit's findings largely confirmed the accuracy of a 2008 Greenpeace report that accused SMART of destroying biodiverse rainforests and carbon-dense peatlands. The Rainforest Action Network is pushing Cargill to adopt strong palm oil sourcing policies to ensure production doesn't led to degradation of peat swamps and deforestation. Palm oil is used widely as cooking oil and in processed food products. But expansion of oil palm plantations over the past 20 years has emerged as one of the biggest drivers of deforestation in Indonesia and Malaysia, the leading producers of the vegetable oil.
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