Posted by jossc — 1 May 2008 at 12:29pm
-
Comments
Potentially good news for orang-utans - Unilever announced this morning that they're now supporting our calls
for a moratorium to protect Indonesia's rainforests from destruction at the hands of the expanding palm oil industry.
When we sent in our own 'orang-utans' to Unilever HQ last week to tell them
that they needed to do more to stop rainforest and peatlands being
cleared to make way for palm oil plantations, company executives told us
that they wouldn't be forced into a quick decision on the matter.
Posted by jamie — 23 April 2008 at 3:15pm
-
Comments
The orang-utans may have retreated from
Unilever's premises for the time being, but our campaign to protect Indonesia's
rainforests from the expanding palm oil industry has only just started. As well
as an advert appearing in today's edition of the Times, commuters at
Blackfriars tube station in London
this morning saw some of our special 'Dove' adverts alongside the escalators.
Blackfriars is the nearest station to Unilever's London headquarters, so a large number of
their staff should have seen them on their way into work. Watch the video below for a taste of what they saw.
Posted by jamie — 21 April 2008 at 6:56pm
-
Comments
A couple of videos that throw our new Dove campaign into sharp relief. The first is a rather stonking effort from our international office, taking Dove's own Onslaught film as it's inspiration (you can see the original here). The second, some highlights from the fun and games in London and Merseyside earlier today. Enjoy.
Posted by jamie — 21 April 2008 at 3:11pm
-
Comments
As of 2pm, orang-utans are still gracing
Unilever premises in London
and Port Sunlight and are showing no signs of swinging down. They've also
appeared on the continent, popping up in Italy
and the Netherlands.
Unilever's Rome HQ has been paid a visit and employees were blocked from
entering the building by a large box placed in front of the entrance, with the
slogan 'Stop Dove destroying rainforests' emblazoned upon it. In Rotterdam, six volunteers
were trying to scale Unilever's waterfront offices to hang a banner with a
similar message, but unfortunately strong winds forced them down.
Today, we're launching the next stage in our campaign to protect the rainforests of Indonesia from the expansion of the palm oil industry. Our volunteers, dressed as orang-utans, are currently climbing over the London headquarters of the company behind Dove, which uses palm oil as one of its ingredients. Our latest research shows that Unilever, the makers of Dove, is buying palm oil from companies that are destroying valuable rainforest and peatland areas, which is bad news not only for the millions of people who depend on them for their way of life and endangered species such as the orang-utan, but also for the global climate.
Major new campaign targets one of the biggest consumers of palm oil on the planet
21 April, 2008
The company behind some of the world's biggest brands, including Dove, is driving the destruction of the last remaining habitats of the orang-utan and massively speeding up climate change, according to environmental group Greenpeace.
Simultaneous "direct actions" are taking place across the UK and Europe, and a damning new report has been released highlighting Unilever's use of palm oil supplied by companies that are systematically destroying the rainforests of Indonesia.
In November 2007, Greenpeace released Cooking the Climate, an 82-page report summarising the findings of a two-year investigation that revealed how
the world’s largest food, cosmetic and biofuel companies were driving the
wholesale destruction of Indonesia’s rainforests and peatlands through growing
palm oil consumption.
Posted by bex — 18 April 2008 at 3:40pm
-
Comments
There's been more creative campaigning in the capital from anti-Heathrow expansion activists - this time, a message glowing softly in the dark for any evening strollers along London's South Bank to see.
'No 3rd Runway' has been written onto the side of an old, defunct barge on the Thames, just near the Oxo Tower, with tiny magnetic LEDs (like the ones shown in this Make Throwies Not Bombs video). It's yet another voice in the growing opposition to Heathrow expansion - along with the four mayoral candidates, a whole raft of organisations and, well, tens of thousands of you. Get involved!
Posted by bex — 18 April 2008 at 1:50pm
-
Comments
Less than a year after the IPCC warned the world that global emissions need to peak within the next 10 years (and then fall sharply), Bush - with much fanfare - has unveiled his new, cunning climate change plan: emit more for the next 17 years, and make sure developing countries help pay for what the US and the industrialised world has already emitted.
His address yesterday came during the latest Major Emitters Meeting - a series of meetings set up by Bush to undermine run in parallel to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change process (the UN's process being inconvenient because it wants mandatory rather than voluntary emissions targets, and says the industrialised world should bear the burden of responsibility for historical emissions).
Posted by bex — 17 April 2008 at 12:49pm
-
Comments
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.