Society’s addiction to palm oil — the world’s most widely consumed vegetable oil — is killing Sumatran elephants.
Sign a petition urging candy makers Hershey’s and Mars to track where destruction is taking place and prove to customers that conflict palm oil isn’t ending up in their products: Calling on the Candymakers
Fresh forest clearance of elephant habitat by Pt Tualang Raya
Plantation Company,
May 16, 2019
Can you picture a herd of elephants moving single file through the dense
understory of a tropical rainforest? On the island of Sumatra, a high-stakes
endgame is unfolding for one of Earth’s most endearing, beloved, emotional
and intelligent animals. Field investigation teams with my organization,
Rainforest Action Network, have documented alarming evidence of fresh forest
clearance within some of the most important remaining lowland rainforests in
Indonesia.
Located in the northeast section of the extraordinary Leuser Ecosystem, the
forests contain internationally recognized concentrations of biological
diversity, including Sumatran tigers and orangutans. In particular, these
rich forests are among the most valuable remaining habitat for critically
endangered Sumatran elephants, who rely on this region as a crucial
migration route connecting larger areas of intact forest. Sumatran elephant
populations are already dangerously depleted, so preventing the extinction
of these iconic species depends on stopping further deforestation in these
priority habitat locations.
A Sumatran elephant in the northeast lowlands of Leuser Ecosystem -
image; Paul Hilton, Rainforest Action Network
A baby Sumatran elephant on the northeast lowlands of Leuser Ecosystem -
image: Paul Hilton, Rainforest Action Network
The ongoing forest destruction is occurring within lands that were previously allocated to three plantation companies: PT Indo Alam, PT Tualang Raya and PT Nia Yulided, the company exposed for the largest extent of clearance since January 2019.
Fresh forest clearance by PT Yuilded Plantation Company, May 23, 2019
While exact elephant population numbers are not known, the International
Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) estimates only about 700-1000
Sumatran elephants are left in all of Sumatra, with a significant portion of
those depending on this area for survival.
For generations, these forest giants have carved paths through the thick
jungle environment, creating green, tunnel-shaped passageways invisible from
above. But now, these remaining animals are increasingly isolated and
divided from each other and cut off from their centuries-old migration
routes by forest fragmentation and the relentless incursion of palm oil
plantations into their shrinking lowland rainforest territories.
Found in roughly half of all packaged products sold in U.S. grocery stores,
palm oil hides in everything from popular snack foods like ice cream, candy
and instant noodles, to household items like laundry detergent, toothpaste
and shampoo. Palm oil has become the most widely used vegetable oil on
Earth, with the vast majority produced in Indonesia and neighboring
Malaysia. A growing international movement has successfully pressured dozens
of major brands to publicly commit to cut “conflict palm oil,” palm oil
associated with deforestation and human rights abuses, from their supply
chains, but those promises remain far from fully realized.
The loss of over 70 percent of Sumatran elephant habitat since 1985 has lead
to increasing human-wildlife conflicts which too often results in these
majestic animals being slaughtered as pests or caught in traps placed by
poachers alongside community gardens or palm oil plantations.
Sumatran elephants face a serious and very real threat of extinction within
our lifetimes. If this is to be prevented, it is of the utmost urgency that
the global brands using palm oil in their products establish monitoring and
enforcement systems to stop deforestation for palm oil suppliers located in
the Leuser Ecosystem and demand only verifiable, truly responsible palm oil.
In May 2019, thousands of concerned consumers signed a petition calling on
candy makers Nestlé, Mars, Mondelēz and Hershey’s to establish proactive,
transparent monitoring systems to identify and halt deforestation in the
Leuser Ecosystem. Nestlé established a satellite-based monitoring system,
but has failed to put its new tool into use to halt new forest loss by these
known perpetrators. Mondelēz chose to require its suppliers to map and
monitor plantations for deforestation instead of establishing its own
transparent monitoring system. The shocking truth is that despite knowing
about this elephant emergency for five years, not a single snack food
company has addressed its connection to the destruction of the lowland
rainforests of the Leuser Ecosystem. For the sake of the remaining Sumatran
elephants, this needs to change.
Government intervention is also needed to protect and reconnect the habitat
for the surviving herds of Sumatran elephants. The Indonesian government
recently announced its commitment to make permanent its moratorium on the
clearance of primary forests across Indonesia. This announcement is a
positive step demonstrating its commitment to protect important forest
areas. For these iconic wildlife species to survive, it is imperative that
the provincial and central governments work together to deliver legal
protections for primary forests threatened by conversion inside the Leuser
Ecosystem.
In September 2018, a presidential instruction by Indonesian President Joko
Widodo was enacted to halt both the forest clearance for palm oil and the
issuance of new permits, and to conduct a review of existing palm oil
permits. The most recent photographic evidence of land clearance reveals the
urgent need for government interventions to enforce moratoria, revoke the
permits of PT Nia Yulided as a sanction for violating the presidential order
to stop clearing and secure commitments from PT Indo Alam and PT Tualang
Raya to protect forest areas where their palm oil concessions are known to
overlap with critical elephant habitat.
Sign a petition urging candy makers Hershey’s and Mars to track where
destruction is taking place and prove to customers that conflict palm oil
isn’t ending up in their products:
Calling on
the Candymakers
Laurel Sutherlin is the senior communications strategist for Rainforest Action Network. He is a lifelong environmental and human rights campaigner as well as a naturalist and outdoor educator with a passion for birds and wild places. Follow him on Twitter @laurelsutherlin.