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Burger King drops palm oil supplier linked to Borneo rainforest destruction

Burger King announced it would no longer source palm oil from Sinar Mas, an Indonesian conglomerate, after an independent audit showed one of the company’s subsidiaries had destroyed rainforests and carbon-dense peatlands in Borneo and Sumatra, according to a statement on the fast food chain’s Facebook page.



In a report issued last month, Sinar Mas tried to misrepresent the results of the audit by claiming it cleared its subsidiary PT Smart of environmental transgressions. After the claims appeared in news media, the auditor, BSI Group, rebuked Sinar Mas by releasing a statement emphasizing that PT Smart had cleared forests and peatlands without proper permits in eight out of the 11 concessions audited on Sumatra and Kalimantan, the Indonesian part of Borneo. The activity violated Indonesian law and rules under the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil’s certification system.



Burger King announced its decision in the following statement:

Burger King’s announcement comes after a campaign by Greenpeace, the activist group whose efforts triggered the original audit of PT Smart’s operations.







Healthy forest and an area deforested for oil palm cultivation in Borneo.

Greenpeace is now pressuring Pizza Hut, KFC, and Dunkin’ Donuts to drop Sinar Mas.



Palm oil is used widely in processed foods and cooking oil, but its production has, at times, come at the expense of tropical forests in Indonesia and Malaysia, putting endangered species such as orangutan at risk and increasing greenhouse gas emissions. Greenpeace and other activist groups are trying to persuade the oil palm growers to adopt stronger sustainability standards that would prohibit conversion of forest lands for new plantations.



The palm oil industry maintains its crop is a cheap source of vegetable oil and an important generator of wealth. Producers note that growing less productive sources of vegetable like canola, corn, and soy, would require more land than oil palm.






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Fraud allegations against Indonesian palm oil giant widen, tarnishing auditors and sustainable palm oil initiative

(08/19/2010) Sinar Mas, an Indonesian conglomerate whose holdings include Asia Pulp and Paper, a paper products brand, and PT Smart, a palm oil producer, was sharply rebuked Wednesday over a recent report where it claimed not to have engaged in destruction of forests and peatlands. At least one of its companies, Golden Agri Resources, may now face an investigation for deliberately misleading shareholders in its corporate filings.

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