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The odd couple: how Greenpeace and McDonald's are working together

Greenpeace research in the Amazon helped identify the link between deforestation and European food manufacturers

John Sauven, campaign special projects director for Greenpeace UK, explains how Greenpeace worked with McDonald's to change the food industry's attitude towards Amazon soya.

"Huge chickens invaded fast food stores in London and started to ask customers if they knew they were eating soya from deforested areas of the Amazon. That was in April. The chickens were noisy Greenpeace activists... It took McDonald's only six hours between the first 'homo chickenacius' invasion of its restaurants and the phone call to Greenpeace to discuss the issue. Why? Because fast-food consumers started to be choked with McNuggets and McChickens. Ethical consumption's appeal is increasing."

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McVictory

Giant chickens invaded McDonald's in April to protest at their involvement in Amazon destruction

In an historic deal that has impacts far beyond the golden arches and into the global agricultural market, McDonald's is now the leading company in the campaign to halt deforestation for the expansion of soya farming in the Amazon.

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Greenpeace close Amazon soya facilities in Brazil and Europe

A sign explaining Cargill's role in Amazon deforestation stands outside their Surrey HQ

You may never have heard of Cargill, but they are the largest privately-owned company in the world. They also happen to be one of the major culprits in the continuing destruction of the Amazon rainforest, driving deforestation to make room for soya plantations. That soya is then shipped out to Europe for animal feed.

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KFC = Klearing Forest for Chickens

Greenpeace activists unfurl a banner saying KFC Amazon Criminal in a soya planatation near Santarem, Brazil

As we revealed in early April, McDonald's have been implicated in the clearance of the Amazon rainforest to grow soya for animal feed and, thanks to the thousands of emails and letters you sent, they're talking to us about how they can get out of the Amazon.

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Greenpeace chickens invade McDonald's across the land

6 Apr 2006
It's a cluckin spectacle at McDonald's across the country this morning as Greenpeace volunteers expose McDonald's role in Amazon destruction

It's a cluckin spectacle at McDonald's across the country this morning as Greenpeace volunteers expose McDonald's role in Amazon destruction

Nationwide protests as fast food giant is linked to Amazon destruction

McDonald's outlets across Britain have been invaded by seven-foot-tall chickens this morning after a new report revealed the role played by the fast food giant in the destruction of the Amazon rainforest. Overnight, scores of restaurants from Edinburgh to Southampton were fly-posted with images of a chainsaw-wielding Ronald McDonald, while outlets in seven major cities are now occupied by the chickens, which have chained themselves to chairs.

The action comes as Greenpeace releases the results of a year long global undercover investigation into the links between high street brands and logging in the Amazon rainforest. Using satellite images, aerial surveillance, previously unreleased government documents and on-the-ground undercover monitoring, campaigners have for the first time been able to track the trade in soya beans from the Amazon rainforest to the Chicken McNuggets eaten in restaurants across Europe.

More than a hundred restaurant windows were covered with Ronald McDonald chainsaw-wielding fly-posters before sunrise by roving teams in London, Edinburgh, Leeds, Manchester, Birmingham, Bristol and Southampton. The chickens entered city centre stores at 7am as the breakfast rush began, using handcuffs to lock themselves to fixtures. A dozen huge chickens are in the McDonald's flagship store in Leicester Square holding protest placards that say: 'WE'RE TRASHIN' IT'. The protests mark the start of a major new international campaign against the beleaguered food giant.

The Greenpeace investigation shows how soya is transported from the Amazon to an illegally built port facility in the town of Santarem - owned by US company Cargill - before being shipped to Europe to be fed to animals for McDonald's meat. Greenpeace investigators tracked shipments from Santarem to Liverpool, then followed and photographed Brazilian soya cargoes as they were delivered to chicken farms that supply McDonald's across Europe.

Greenpeace forest campaigner Pat Venditti said: "McDonald's is fuelling a trade that's trashing the Amazon. Rainforest is being illegally cleared to make way for soya farms to feed animals in Europe. Our investigation clearly links that deforestation to McDonald's. Every time you buy a Chicken McNugget you could be taking a bite out of the Amazon."

The investigation, detailed today in a new report EATING UP THE AMAZON, reveals that official Brazilian government documents show some of the farms supplying Cargill have used slaves to clear the forest for agriculture.

Greenpeace has documentary evidence that proves the following:

    US company Cargill, which owns the illegal export terminal at Santarem, is supplied by farms operating on rainforest land that has been illegally cleared for soya production.

    The soya from Amazon farms is exported from Santarem to Europe, along with non-Amazon soya. Cargill exported over 220,000 tonnes of Brazilian soya from Santarem to Liverpool from March 2005 to February 2006.

    Greenpeace has tracked Santarem soya from Cargill's Liverpool facility to Sun Valley poultry farm in Hereford. Sun Valley is owned by Cargill. Senior Sun Valley staff told Greenpeace 25% of their chicken feed comes from Cargill's Liverpool facility.

    Sun Valley then supplies chicken from these farms to McDonald's across the UK and Europe. In a meeting last week between Greenpeace and McDonald's the company did not deny that their chicken is fed on Amazon soya. Greenpeace first asked McDonald's to account for their chicken feed three months ago.

 

Last year McDonald's named Cargill its first ever 'Supplier of the Year', awarded to the business that makes the most significant impact on, and contribution to, the fast food chain's US business results.

The report conclusively links Cargill's Santarem facility - which supplies soya to produce McNuggets - to illegal deforestation. In one of numerous case studies contained within the report, soya supplied to the terminal is traced back to the Lavras farm, which sits on illegally grabbed land, some of which was cleared of rainforest to grow soya. Greenpeace has a copy of the contract between Cargill and the farm's owners, the Cortezia brothers.

A report last month in Nature magazine revealed that 40% of the Amazon will be lost by 2050 if current trends in agricultural expansion continue, threatening bio-diversity and massively contributing to climate change.

Pat Venditti added: "McDonald's is spending millions sponsoring the football World Cup, while an area of the Amazon rainforest the size of a football pitch is being destroyed every ten seconds. McDonald's is super-sizing Amazon destruction."

For more information contact Greenpeace on 0207 865 8255
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Dowload a full copy of the report: Eating up the Amazon

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Eating up the Amazon

Body: 

Publication date: 6 April 2006

Summary
New Greenpeace research shows how this soya is being fed to the chickens that you eat at places like McDonald's. We have documented thousands of tonnes of soya is being exported from the heart of the Amazon into the UK. The soya is then fed to millions of chickens in the farms that supply McDonald's. This means that every time you buy a Chicken McNugget you're taking a bite out of the Amazon.

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We're trashin' it

Body: 

How McDonald's is eating up the Amazon

Publication date: 6 April 2006

Summary
This crime file follows the chain of rainforest destruction from the heart of the Amazon, where huge areas of forest are being cleared to plant soya, back to the UK, where McDonald's Chicken McNuggets are sold to millions of people every week.

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We're trashin' it!

Its a cluckin spectacle at McDonalds across the country this morning as Greenpeace volunteers expose McDonalds role in Amazon destruction

The Amazon rainforest covers 5 per cent of the world's land and extends over some 7.8 million kilometres. It is one of the most biodiverse regions on earth - at least 30 per cent of the world's land-based animal and plant species live there. The Amazon is also home to about 220,000 people from 180 different indigenous nations who live deep in the rainforest, and it plays a vital role in maintaining the world's climate.

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McDonalds to ban meat, milk and eggs from GM-fed animals

20 Nov 2000
gmfree

Fast food chain McDonalds is to ban meat, milk and eggs from farm animals fed on GM crops. The company is now asking its suppliers in the UK to find sources of animal feed that do not contain genetically modifed material.

The dramatic move will almost certainly force other fast food chains to go totally GM-free - Burger King in Germany and the UK has already announced that it will abandon products from animals fed a GM diet. The McDonalds announcement comes after a Greenpeace campaign to end the use of GM animal feed.

McDonalds said in a statement that: "McDonalds in the UK has taken the decision to move away from the use of animal feed containing genetically modified ingredients. We have therefore requested that our suppliers seek non-GM sources of feed". Commenting on the announcement, a McDonald's spokeswoman said: "We are listening to concerns expressed by consumers seeking reassurances about the safety of food and we will continue to monitor public opinion and scientific developments".