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With up to a fifth of global greenhouse gas emissions coming from cutting down and burning forests, it's clear we cannot avert a climate disaster unless world leaders take action of their own to stop the destruction.
Fifty of our activists - from Indonesia, Philippines, Thailand, Spain, Germany, Belgium, Brazil and Finland - shut down deforestation operations in the heart of the Indonesian rainforest and stopped companies clearing and destroying the carbon-rich forest peatland and asked Obama to live up to the promise he made to take decisive action on climate change. With just weeks left before December's critical UN climate summit, his administration is actively undermining and stalling the climate change negotiations.
One group unfurled a huge 20x30 metre banner in a freshly destroyed area of rainforest that read “Obama: you can stop this”. Others locked themselves to all seven digging machines that were in the middle of destroying the rainforest in one of the pulp and paper concessions in the Kampar Peninsula - owned by Asia Pacific Resources International Holding Limited (APRIL -- one of Indonesia's biggest pulp and paper producers). In spite of intense heat, swarms of mosquitoes and tropical rain - our activists managed to hold their nerve and remained locked onto the digging machinery. Workers even started three of the excavators and moved one of them with three of our activists still on its roof. They only stopped when other activists bravely sat right in front of the machine.
Things began to get tense about 10 hours into the action - when company staff broke the chains and started another of the four diggers - even though it had 7 activists locked onto it. The police moved in to stop the protest. Our activists are currently detained by the police.
In response to a letter we sent voicing our concerns about forest destruction in this region, pulp and paper company APRIL stated that it had ceased operations in the Kampar Peninsula. But we knew otherwise. So, earlier this week we released fresh evidence - including aerial surveillance images - that left no doubt that APRIL is destroying this rainforest. This data also raised damning suspicions that the company is draining and destroying forest peat that is deeper than three meters - the maximum depth allowed by Indonesian law.
A few hours ago, we brought this evidence to a public meeting held by APRIL in the regional capital of Pekanbaru where the company was introducing the latest of a string of so-called 'High Value Forest Assessments' aimed at greenwashing its image.
Watch this space to see what happens next...
Today's action took
place on the Kampar Peninsula on the Indonesian island of Sumatra,
where we have set up a 'Climate Defenders' Camp'. Rainforest and the
destruction of the forest's carbon-rick peat soil in Indonesia emits
huge quantities of CO2 and has driven Indonesia to become the world's
third largest climate polluter after China and the US. The peatland in
this area alone stores approximately 2 billion tonnes
of carbon. Our activists at the camp have spent the past weeks
constructing dams across the canals - built by paper companies to
prepare the land for plantations - to prevent them draining and
destroying the forest and its peat and releasing alll this CO2 to the
atmosphere.
In two days, President Obama joins 20 other Heads of State in Singapore to discuss
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) - just a few weeks before he and other leaders
must agree an historic deal to avert a climate crisis at December's
UN climate summit. Instead of continuing to block progress - Obama and
other world leaders need to push for an
ambitious, fair and effective deal that includes ending the destruction
of the world's rainforests.
To end global deforestation, industrialised countries must invest
30 billion euros in forest protection (on an
annual basis, mostly from polluters, not taxpayers). This is less than the
US gave to individual banks during the financial crisis last year - a staggering $180
billion went to bailout AIG alone.