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L’Oreal pledges to wipe out forest destruction from its products by 2020

French cosmetics giant, L’Oreal, has pledged to stop using palm oil linked to deforestation for its products by 2020. Palm oil, which is found in both cosmetics and many food items, has been linked to widespread deforestation in places like Indonesia and Malaysia, decimating biodiversity and contributing to global warming. The crop, which is both high-yield and lucrative, is now becoming increasingly popular in Africa and Latin America as well.



“In a win for consumers around the world, L’Oreal has committed to ending its role in forest destruction,” noted Bustar Maitar, head of the Indonesia Forest Campaign with Greenpeace. Maitar further urged L’Oreal to move up its timeline from 2020 given the scale of the problem.



Recently, the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) estimated that palm oil plantations were responsible for the loss of 3.5 million hectares (8.7 million acres) of forest in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Papua New Guinea from 1990-2010. This constitutes an area larger than the Netherlands and has helped push tens of thousands of species, including orangutans, tigers, rhinos, and elephants
closer to extinction. During the period, about 37 percent of palm oil plantations came at the expense of forest.




New oil palm plantation in Costa Rica. Photo by: Rhett A. Butler.

New oil palm plantation in Costa Rica. Photo by: Rhett A. Butler.



L’Oreal’s commitment goes beyond palm oil as well. The company has pledged that its consumption of other commodities, such as soy and wood-fiber, will also come from zero-deforestation sources by 2020.



With its commitment to only source palm oil and other commodities not linked to deforestation, L’Oreal joins a growing number of companies including Nestle, Unilever, Ferrero, and Wilmar International. Still, many companies have yet to make such commitments.



“Thousands of people in Indonesia and around the world who have signed up demanding forest-friendly products will be turning their eyes to companies such as P&G, the producer of Heads & Shoulders, and Colgate Palmolive to guarantee that they too are not peddling dirty palm oil from forest destruction,” Maitar added.











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