All articles
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Steering Group established to oversee the High Carbon Stock (HCS) Approach for implementing ‘No Deforestation’ commitments
A group of leading plantation companies with commitments to eliminate deforestation from their supply chains, NGOs and technical support organisations met on 25th and 26th August in Singapore to establish a governance and standardisation body for the methodology, known as the High Carbon Stock (HCS) Approach, to be used to implement these commitments.
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Palm oil giant Wilmar caught in forest scandal – Greenpeace
Household brands such as P&G, Reckitt Benckiser and Mondelez exposed to tiger extinction
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Thailand’s civil society statement on the oil spill and leaked pipeline
The leaked pipeline of PTT Global Chemical PLC has caused an emission of massive oil spill in Rayong’s Gulf of Thailand and has brought adverse impacts on marine ecology, tourism and the livelihood of local residents.
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Fire hotspots expose gaps in Indonesia’s forests moratorium
Greenpeace revealed half of the fire hotspots detected between June 11-18 that are choking Singapore and Malaysia with air pollution are in areas that should be protected by Indonesia’s forest moratorium.
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Greenpeace welcomes Golden Agri-Resources progress towards a ‘no deforestation footprint’ for palm oil
Greenpeace Indonesia welcomed the release today of a report from palm oil producer Golden Agri-Resources (GAR) identifying which forests should be protected as an important step forward in the fight against deforestation.
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Even deep peatlands are destroyed in tiger habitats
Greenpeace activists continued to bear witness to the pathetic sight of Sumatran forests being destroyed by pulp and paper companies.
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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.
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Asia Pulp and Paper awarded Golden Chainsaw
Greenpeace accuses APP company of being one of the worst rainforest destroyers in Indonesia.
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Greenpeace greener electronic ranking shows how actions speak louder than words for the electronics industry
Philips and HP introduce new transformative products, Toshiba and Microsoft fail to act on their promises.