Full
report is available here http://www.foe.co.uk/resource/reports/losingground.pdf
Executive summary (with biofuels
emphasis) here:
http://www.foe.co.uk/resource/reports/losingground-summary.pdf
Friends of
the Earth / LifeMosaic Press Release
Embargo: 00:01 Monday 11
February
EU fueling human rights disaster in Indonesia
Friends of the Earth press
office: 020 7566 1649
Palm oil production for
food and biofuels is resulting in wide spread human rights abuses in Indonesia
according to a report released today by a coalition of international
environmental groups. In Losing Ground Friends of the Earth, Sawit
Watch, and LifeMosaic expose the huge social problems being fueled by EU
targets to increase the use of biofuels in transport.
The report reveals that oil
palm companies often use violent tactics to grab land from indigenous
communities with the collusion of the police and authorities. Previously
self-reliant families, who were able to meet their own needs from the forest
around them, complain of being tricked into giving up their land with the
promise of jobs and new developments. Instead they end up locked into debt and
poorly paid work, while the bounty of the rainforest is replaced with
monotonous oil palm plantations. Pollution from pesticides, fertilisers and the
pressing process is also leaving some villages without clean water.
Since 2005,
Friends of the Earth, Sawit Watch and LifeMosaic have worked closely together
on a project aimed at bringing impartial information to communities affected by
oil palm plantations in Indonesia, enabling them to make informed decisions
about their land and their futures. Losing Ground draws on
community testimonies gathered during this project, new Sawit Watch data and
previous research to provide an insight into the social, economic and cultural
impacts of oil palm plantations.
The European Commission
has recently proposed a target for 10 per cent of road transport fuel to come
from biofuels by 2020 in an attempt to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, despite
mounting evidence that biofuels fail to deliver such reductions. These targets
will fuel a huge expansion in the amount of land used to grow oil palm. Friends
of the Earth and LifeMosaic are calling on MEPs and Member States to reject the
10 per cent target when it comes before the European Parliament and Council
this spring. To tackle transport pollution the EU should instead strengthen its
proposals for mandatory emissions limits on all new cars.
Hannah Griffiths, Friends
of the Earth biofuels campaigner:
“This report shows that as
well as being bad for the environment, biofuels from palm oil are a disaster
for people. MEPs should listen to the evidence and use the forthcoming debate
on this in the European Parliament to reject the 10 per cent target. Instead of
introducing targets for more biofuels the EU should insist that all new cars
are designed to be super efficient. The UK Government must also take a strong
position against the 10 per cent target in Europe and do its bit to reduce
transport emissions by improving public transport and making it easier for
people to walk and cycle.”
Serge Marti from
LifeMosaic, author of Losing Ground:
“Indonesia
is a uniquely diverse country whose communities and environment are being
sacrificed for the benefit of a handful of companies and wealthy individuals. This
report should help the Indonesian government to recognise that there is a
problem, and to step up efforts to protect the rights
of communities. In Europe we must realise that encouraging large
fuel companies to grab community land across the developing world is no
solution to climate change. The EU must play its part by abandoning its
10 per cent target for biofuels.”
Abetnego
Tarigan, Deputy Director Sawit Watch
"Oil
palm companies have already taken over 7.3 million hectares of land for plantations,
resulting in 513 ongoing conflicts between companies and communities. Given the
negative social and environmental impacts of oil palm, Sawit Watch demands
reform of the Indonesian oil palm plantation system and a re-think of
plantation expansion plans. "
NOTES
The European commission is
proposing sustainability criteria for biofuels but they do not include any
attempts to address the social impacts of biofuel production. This means that
the EU’s increased biofuel use will lead to more of the types of problems
exposed in Losing Ground as more land is converted to meet the increased
demand for palm oil.
85% of the worlds Palm Oil
is produced in plantations in Indonesia and Malaysia. According to local
government plans Indonesia alone plans a further 20million hectares of
plantations by 2020 - an area the size of England, Holland and Switzerland
combined. The Oil Palm industry says that plantation expansion is vital for
economic development and methods used are both environmentally sustainable and benefit
the local people. However in the resulting vast monoculture plantations little
survives. Half the loss of orang-utans habitat in the last decade has been
linked to Oil Palm plantation expansion.
The
deforestation and drainage of peat swamps for palm oil production has made
Indonesia the third highest emitter of green house gases after the USA and
China.
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