All articles
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Wilmar executives resign as fallout from deforestation scandal spreads
Martua Sitorus, the co-founder of the world’s largest palm oil trader, Wilmar International, has resigned one week after Greenpeace exposed his links to Gama Plantation
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World’s largest palm oil trader linked to rainforest destruction twice the size of Paris
Wilmar International, the world’s largest palm oil trader, is still linked to forest destruction for palm oil almost five years after committing to end deforestation.
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Nestlé misses the mark with statement on tackling its single-use plastics problem
Nestlé, released a statement that does not include clear targets to reduce and eventually phase out single-use plastics.
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Documents detail what Shell knew about climate change decades ago: Greenpeace reaction
The new revelations confirm that Shell has known for decades that the burning of its fossil fuels products could lead to devastating climate impacts
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Nestlé, Unilever, P&G among worst offenders for plastic pollution in Philippines in beach audit
Manila - A week-long beach clean up has exposed the companies most responsible for plastic pollution after an audit of plastic waste conducted on Freedom Island, a critical wetland habitat and Ramsar site [1] spanning 30 hectares in Manila Bay - one of the worst areas for plastic pollution in the Philippines.
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Statement of Greenpeace Southeast Asia on the climate plans of the oil majors ahead of UN summit
The climate plans that will be released today by the oil majors – Shell, BP, BG Group, Saudi Aramco, Sinopec, Pemex, Total, and ENI - make a mockery of the global efforts to address climate change.
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Success: Barbie and Mattel drop deforestation!
Mattel released a global policy that will keep rainforest destruction out of its supply chains.
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How the toy sector and APP are responding to our Indonesia forest campaign
Looking deeper into signs that both Mattel and Lego are preparing to make changes in the way they buy their packaging.
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Greenpeace launches project to protect Citarum River
81% agree that industries should stop polluting Western Java’s most important freshwater source.







