You Are Here:
Fill in the form below and click on the "send" button. Our server will send an e-mail message to the recipient that includes the URL of the story you want to share.
You can send to multiple e-mail addresses by separating them with COMMAs: a.name@aserver.com, another.name@anotherserver.com
This morning, 32 Greenpeace activists from Finland and Sweden locked down a palm oil diesel refinery of Neste Oil in Porvoo, Finland. Neste Oil, an oil refining company largely owned by the Finnish government (1), is set - over the next three years - to become the world's largest consumer of palm oil. This expansion will lead to massive deforestation and contribute to global warming.
Enlarge Image(1) The Finnish government owns 50.1% of Neste Oil.
http://nesteoil.com/default.asp?path=1;41;540;1259;1261;2357;4401
(2) World Resources Institute, The Climate Analysis Indicators Tool
(3) Fargione, J., Hill, J., Tilman, D., Polasky, S., Hawthorne, P.
2008. Land Clearing and the Biofuel Carbon Debt, Science 1235-1238.
(4) www.nesteoil.com
(5) Deforestation causes a fifth of global greenhouse gas emissions,
more than the entire transport sector in the world. IPCC A R 4 (2007):
WGIII Ch1
(6) To see how much each EU country should contribute and how to raise
the funds, see http://www.greenpeace.org/financing-eu-responsibility.
The finance package should be divided as follows:
- € 30 billion a year to stop deforestation through a 'forests for climate' protection fund (see www.greenpeace.org/forestsforclimate for details on Greenpeace's proposed funding mechanism);
- € 40 billion a year to shift developing countries onto a low emissions pathway;
- € 40 billion a year to enable the most vulnerable to cope with climate change.