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Launching Greenpeace Africa

"While the environmental threats facing Africans are urgent and critical, Africa is in a position to leapfrog dirty development and become a leader in helping to avert catastrophic climate change and protect the natural environment. We are here to help make that happen."

Amadou Kanoute, Executive Director of Greenpeace Africa.

 

Greenpeace Africa is here! Marking a whole new era for Greenpeace, we opened our first African office yesterday, in Johannesburg. In the coming weeks, we'll be opening two more - one in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the other in Senegal.

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Poisoning the poor - electronic waste in Ghana

Ghana

Do you know what happens to your old telly once it conks out and you chuck it away? Well, it gets dumped onto developing countries in Asia and Africa as 'second hand goods' where unprotected workers (often kids) dismantle computers and TVs in search of metals that can be sold. The remaining plastic, cables and casing is either burnt in an e-waste pyre or simply dumped. Let me take you on a virtual journey to the 'scrapyards' of Ghana where some of the electronic waste from the western world ends up.

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Conning the Congo

Conning the CongoAs if Carving up the Congo wasn't enough, logging companies are also evading paying taxes and cheating the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) out of millions of euros in revenue. A new report we have released today called Conning the Congo shows how the logging company Danzer has avoided paying approximately €8 million in tax from its logging operations in the DRC and the Republic of Congo. Just to put €8m in context in this part of the world, that is more than fifty times the DRC Ministry of Environment's annual operating budget.

The Congo rainforests of Central Africa form the second largest rainforest block on Earth after Amazon. They are of great importance for the global climate, the planet's biodiversity and the forest-dwelling communities who depend on them for resources and livelihoods.

Full story on Greenpeace International website

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Would you care about climate change more if you lived in a mud hut?

Archbishop Desmond Tutu

Archbishop Desmond Tutu on the Greenpeace ship MV Esperanza in 2002

That's what Archbishop Desmond Tutu is asking the leaders of the most polluting economies, living up to his reputation for calling a spade a spade in, um, spades. Read more »

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World Bank ditches shares in Congo-trashing company

Forest canopy in the Congo rainforest

There have been some great developments around our Congo rainforest campaign, as the FT reported on its website this morning that one of the arms of the World Bank will offload the shares it owns in a company known to be destroying the forest of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

The International Finance Corporation (IFC) has announced that it will divest its holdings in Olam International, a Singapore-based company which has operations in the DRC. The Congo report we released earlier this year showed how Olam was holding forest land granted in breach of the current moratorium which the World Bank itself helped establish and that it was also trading in dodgy timber. As a result, Olam has since given back its forest holdings to the DRC government, but it still buys illegal timber cut by local companies.

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World Bank Group finances company involved in the illegal destruction of the Congo rainforest

29 Aug 2007

The World Bank's International Finance Corporation (IFC) is financing a Singapore-based trading group, Olam International Ltd, which has been involved in trading illegal timber in the rainforest of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). The world's 'local bank', HSBC, is also providing financial services to the company, in breach of its environmental policy. Olam is today expected to report much improved profits in its half yearly financial results.

Nearly three weeks ago, the DRC provincial authorities seized illegal timber shipments from Olam International in the remote province of Bandundu. The area's Forestry Minister, Coco Pembe, accused the company of trading illegal timber, cut by local companies whose logging permits have expired.

These seizures of illegal timber follow revelations in Greenpeace's report earlier this year 'Carving Up the Congo' showing that in 2005, Olam was awarded three logging titles covering over 300,000 hectares, in violation of a 2002 moratorium which was supposed to stop the allocation of new logging titles in the DRC. Whilst Olam claims to have since handed back one title, the other two are subject to a legal review expected to report later this year. The report also revealed that Olam trades in timber from third parties whose destructive logging operations cause social conflicts, massive environmental damage and significant loss or state revenue.(1)

Olam is funded by the World Bank Group, whilst HSBC and Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) are providing financial services to the company.

In December 2003, the IFC invested US$15 million in Olam and during 2004, a partial guarantee of a further $US50 million was also approved.(2) As of Fiscal Year 2006, the IFC held US$11.2 million in Olam loans and guarantees.(3) Despite this, the World Bank denies any IFC involvement in the DRC forest sector, stating on its website that "the Bank does not fund logging anywhere in Africa and our main advice to the Government of DRC is not to expand industrial logging". (4)

Forest campaigner Sarah Shoraka said, "This is an example of the World Bank's appalling double standards. While the left hand of the Bank claims to be saving the Congo rainforest, its right hand is helping finance its destruction. Rather than financing the plunder of the world's second largest rainforest, the World Bank should invest in strengthening forest law enforcement in the DRC, to control the wanton and illegal destruction being perpetrated by logging companies."

HSBC and Royal Bank of Scotland are two of Olam's principle bankers.(5) HSBC's forest sector guidelines prohibit it from providing financial assistance for commercial logging operations in "primary tropical moist forest" or in "violation of local or national laws in respect of illegal logging". The company claims to only support customers in this sector that are operating forests moving towards certification by the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC).(6) RBS does not even have a policy in regard to this.

Shoraka continued: "HSBC and RBS should stop facilitating the carve up of the Congo by cutting all links with Olam immediately."

Olam's operations have already faced legal issues elsewhere in Africa, and in 2004 it was fined $20,000 by the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission for illegal practices in the US market.(7)

The Congo forest is the world's second largest rainforest after the Amazon. In the DRC alone, an estimated 40 million people depend on the forests for their livelihoods. Greenpeace is calling for the cancellation of all logging titles issued since May 2002 and for the moratorium on new logging titles to be extended and enforced until the sector is under control and a land-use plan that includes the participation of local communities is fully in place.

Contact: Greenpeace Press Office on 0207 865 8115

NOTES TO EDITOR

1. The Greenpeace report 'Carving Up The Congo' can be downloaded at http://www.greenpeace.org.uk/media/reports/carving-up-the-congo

2. IFC Summary of Project Information, project numbers 20929 and 22659

3. IFC, letter to Greenpeace, July 31, 2007

4. World Bank website

5. http://www.listedcompany.com/ir/Olam/misc/Olam_ar2006.pdf (page 69)

6. HSBC Forest Land and Forest Products Sector Guidelines (pdf)

7. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Release 4914-04 (CFTC Docket No. 04-13)

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How the World Bank and HSBC are investing in deforestation

Timber being sawn up in Bandundu province, DRC

Back in April, at the World Bank's spring meeting, there was much talk about the plight of the Congo rainforest. We'd just published a big report detailing how in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) logging titles were being granted in breach of a moratorium that the bank had been instrumental in establishing. The report launch was so high profile, we were able to force DRC's rainforest high onto the agenda of the World Bank meeting and have also managed to secure another session at the upcoming autumn meeting.

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Congo timber ship blocked

Greenpeace volunteers climb a crane at La Rochelle port in France

Right now, a group of Greenpeace climbers are perched on top of a set of cranes in the port of La Rochelle on the French Atlantic coast. They've been there since Wednesday night and as well as admiring a no-doubt magnificent view, they're also preventing a ship unloading its cargo of timber which has come from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

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What you can do to help protect the Congo rainforest

We need your help to protect the Congo rainforest. It's the second largest rainforest on Earth (only the Amazon is bigger), supporting millions of people as well as being stuffed full of unique and engandered species, including gorillas, chimpanzees and bonobos. And like all large forests, it is crucially important for regulating the local and global climate.

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G8 deal - Greenpeace response

7 Jun 2007

Reacting to today's G8 agreement on climate change, Greenpeace UK director John Sauven said:

"George Bush's final gift to Blair falls short of what was needed to protect the climate. An agreement without targets is barely worth the paper it's written on."

He continued: "Bush says the US will 'seriously consider' substantial long term cuts in greenhouse gas emissions, but that's like saying aid to Africa is a good thing then refusing to actually commit to donating a single dollar."

He added:

"Scientists tell us we need to slash emissions over the next decade if we're to have a chance of preventing dangerous climate change. This document acknowledges the seriousness of the situation then ducks reality by offering weasel words like 'seriously considering', as if this was an after dinner discussion rather than the most important issue facing the world."

The document can be read here (pdf). 

For more information, contact the Greenpeace press office – 0207 865 8255