Going Ape Vision

Increasing Awareness, Sharing Passion and Creating Opportunities

Going Ape aims to connect us with our roots in nature, preserving the world's rainforests as well as ancient shamanistic knowledge and traditions of indigenous tribes of the rainforests.

1. Increase Awareness for the Protection of the World's Rainforests

Going Ape offers an opportunity, where everybody can share their passion and inspirations for the preservation of the world's rainforest and get involved in Going Ape Events.

2. Sharing our Passion and Committment for the World's Rainforests

Go Ape, be part of the rainforest tribe and support its protection through volunteering. The world's rainforests are the home for more than half of all animal and plant species on Earth, as well as for many indigenous tribes whose lives depends on the rainforests.

3. Creating Opportunities for a Sustainable Society

Going Ape aims to connect us with our roots in nature and empowering us to be the change that we want to see. The rainforests are the second-largest ecosystems on the planet. If rainforests are deforested CO2 is released into the atmosphere, contributing to global warming.

Monday 15 April 2013

Global sustainability forum tells Indonesian paper giant: end deforestation or else

Jakarta, 12 April 2013: The World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD), which claims to be the "world’s foremost business association dedicated to sustainable development", today warned Asia Pacific Resources International (APRIL), Indonesia’s second largest pulp and paper producer, to clean up its act. The move is a result of APRIL’s ongoing large-scale destruction of Indonesia’s rainforest.

“Being put on probation by this organisation is a humiliating blow to APRIL’s claims to practice sustainable forest management,” said Zul Fahmi, Forest Campaigner at Greenpeace South East Asia.

“The reality is that APRIL is now the largest driver of deforestation for pulp and paper in Indonesia. If it wants to stay in the WBCSD and needs to clean up the destruction we have documented time and time again.”

Such a move to crack down on its members is a first for the WBCSD, which this week prominently profiled Nestle zero deforestation policy and guides to help other companies avoid deforestation in their commodity sourcing on its home page.

Greenpeace investigations have shown that APRIL is clearing many thousands of hectares of peatland forests. These carbon-rich rainforests are vital not just for climate stability, but also as habitat for critically endangered Sumatran tigers and an internationally protected tree species, ramin. APRIL also has a long history of social conflicts with local communities.

Recent government data reveal that 60% of fibre supply to APRIL's Riau Andalan Pulp & Paper (RAPP) pulp mill in Indonesia – one of the largest mills in the world – is rainforest wood. In 2012, APRIL planned to feed its Sumatran pulp mill by clearing another 60,000 hectares of rainforest – an area nearly the size of Singapore.

“Earlier this year APP, the largest pulp and paper company in Indonesia, committed to end its role in deforestation in Indonesia. It’s time for APRIL to recognise how out of step it is with the rest of the global business community and immediately join APP to end its involvement in deforestation,” said Zul.

Greenpeace International approached WBCSD in February with findings from investigations exposing the conflict between APRIL’s deforestation and WBCSD’s environmental principles. This is in addition to requests from a significant number of peer companies in the WBCSD and from NGO groups who pushed for a review of APRIL.

Media contact:

Tristan Tremschnig, Indonesia Forests Communications Coordinator, Greenpeace International, email: tristan.tremschnig@greenpeace.org, phone: +31 6 43 78 7393

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