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Thirteen activists locked down cranes at the giant paper plant's port calling for strong leadership from world leaders to avert climate chaos and to provide funds needed to end tropical deforestation as part of a fair, ambitious and legally binding climate deal at the Copenhagen Climate Summit in December.
Deforestation is one of the roots of the climate crisis. We are shutting down this plant at the frontline of forest destruction to tell Heads of State that they can - and must - pull us back from the brink of catastrophic climate change. The paper mill is owned by Asia Pulp & Paper (APP). The parent company, Sinar Mas, is a leading driver of global climate change due to its widespread role in forest destruction. This plant is fed by wood from one of the world's largest peatland forests, on the Kampar Peninsula in Sumatra, which stores up to 2 gigatonnes of carbon.
Our
action comes as President Barack Obama is attempting to relegate the
Copenhagen climate deal to nothing but a political statement and to
postpone critical decisions on a legally binding agreement. President
Obama and other world leaders cannot be allowed to sabotage a strong
outcome in Copenhagen because of their lack of political will.
Significant funds are urgently needed to end tropical deforestation in
Indonesia and around the world. This must be a central part of any
climate agreement.
Paper giant APP sells its products on the
global market in China, the United States, Europe and Australia and
supplies many international brands and distributors with paper
products. Customers include Vogue, Kentucky Fried Chicken and designer
Marc Jacobs. APP, alongside their main competitor APRIL, are both
responsible for destroying rainforests and their carbon-rich peat soil
across Indonesia, including the threatened Kampar Peninsula of Sumatra
- the location our Climate Defenders Camp. Containing 2 billion tonnes
of carbon, the Peninsula is one of the planet’s largest natural carbon
stores and a key defence against global climate change.
We
have been working with local communities over the past month to
highlight the central role that deforestation plays in driving global
climate change. Our Climate Defenders took action in the area against
APRIL on November 12. Since then, both the camp and the local
communities have been under sustained intimidation by the authorities
including threats, arrests and deportations. But last week the
Indonesian government suspended APRIL from destroying the area further
- pending a review of the company’s permits.
Indonesia is the world's third largest climate polluter after China
and the US, mainly as a result of the ongoing destruction of its
forests and their peat soils. Globally, a million hectares of forests
are destroyed every month. That's an area the size of a football pitch
every two seconds -- emitting so much CO2 that deforestation is one of
the main causes of climate change, responsible for about a fifth of
global greenhouse gas emissions.
With the UN Copenhagen Climate Summit just around the corner, Heads of State of developed countries must show real leadership and secure a robust climate deal in December that includes a global funding mechanism that will transfer 30 billion euros (US$42 billion) annually from industrialised countries to poor forested countries like Indonesia, Congo and Brazil, with the aim of ending deforestation by 2020. Such a deal must deliver substantial emissions reductions from deforestation as well as protect wildlife and respect the rights of forest-dwelling people. It must also ensure that money does not end up in the hands of those responsible for forest destruction, like those in the logging industry.If world leaders can commit to halting deforestation at the UN Climate Summit in Copenhagen - they can accomplish one of the quickest but also one of the most cost effective tasks required to prevent runaway climate change.