All articles
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Top consumer companies’ palm oil sustainability claims go up in flames
Unilever, Mondelez, Nestle, and P&G are each linked to up to 10,000 fire hotspots in Indonesia.
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Brazilian Indigenous leaders interrupt global summit to tell top brands “our survival is at stake”
Indigenous leaders targeted CEOs and senior management of some of the world’s biggest brands, including Nestle, Unilever and Mondelēz, at a summit in Berlin.
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Greenpeace Brazil activists deliver oil spill and charred trees to capital, activists detained
"We are experiencing a climate emergency, we need to abandon fossil fuels and accelerate the transition to a 100% clean and renewable energy matrix.”
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Inside Indonesia’s “oxygen house” where children come for fresh air
An “oxygen house” at the heart of Indonesia's current forest fires crisis became too much for one Greenpeace photographer. This is his story.
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My life in Indonesia, the country of haze
But each year we hope; we hope that the fire will not return, and the haze will not stifle us.
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Two decades of campaigning win one of Russia’s largest nature reserves
Russia has established one of its largest old-growth nature reserves; a 300,000 hectares area larger than the size of Luxembourg, after two decades of campaigning.
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Palm oil and pulp companies with most burned land go unpunished as Indonesian forest fires rage
None of the ten palm oil concessions in Indonesia with the largest total burned areas received serious civil or administrative sanctions.
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5 reasons McDonald’s, Burger King, KFC must speak up about the Amazon fires
The Amazon rainforest is on fire. But what does this have to do with McDonald’s, KFC and Burger King?
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Why we’ve had enough of broken promises to protect forests
My home, Indonesia, has the world’s third-largest tropical forest with the most biodiversity on earth, but we are also one of the five largest carbon emitters in the world.
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Greenpeace calls on fast food giants to take a stand against Bolsonaro’s Amazon destruction
"Fast food companies buying from Brazil cannot continue business as usual while the biggest rainforest in the world is burnt down for cattle farms."