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UPDATED ACTION ALERT                    PLEASE FORWARD WIDELY!

Malaysian Govt. Denies Well Documented Oil Palm Development Plans in Brazilian 
Amazon

By Rainforest Rescue with Ecological Internet's Climate Ark
  http://www.regenwald.org/international/englisch/ & http://www.climateark.org/
    May 21, 2009

TAKE ACTION HERE NOW:
http://www.climateark.org/shared/alerts/send.aspx?id=amazon_oil_palm

In a startling yet welcome announcement, Malaysian government's land agency now 
denies plans to produce oil palm in the Amazon. While the prospect of a 
Malaysian government agency funding Amazonian oil palm has been dealt a serious 
setback, it is likely this project will re-emerge. Let's get formal commitment 
from the Malaysian government that this project is canceled, and to stop all 
Malaysian government and private industry funding of oil palm expansion 
overseas. Maybe, just maybe, we are winning this one!

BRIEF UPDATE:

In a positive yet puzzling development, a spokesperson for the Malaysian 
government's federal land agency (FELDA) now denies plan for Malaysian 
government controlled oil palm development in the heart of the Amazon ever 
existed. Wan Zaleha Wan Embong, from FELDA's Public Relations Department, has 
been responding to our network's protest emails, disavowing the plans and 
stating "for your info the project never take (sic) place." The sudden change 
of plans is either an attempt to save face, the project has been cancelled due 
to our protests and/or economic difficulties, or deceitful politics as the 
project is reorganized with private rather than government capital.
In July of 2008, Malaysia's own Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak (then 
Deputy) announced the project. He is widely reported to have said Felda Global 
Ventures Brazil Sdn Bhd would invest some RM25mil (US$7.12mil) for a 70% stake 
in the project near the Amazon River in Brazil. He is quoted when announcing 
Felda's foray in South America as saying "Felda wants to emulate Petronas as a 
global player… As a start, 20,000ha in Tefe will be opened for oil palm 
planting. After that, between 3,000ha and 5,000ha will be opened yearly." As 
recently as March 25, 2009, Brazilian ambassador to Malaysia, Sergio Arruda, 
reportedly stated the oil palm cultivation project would commence this year.
Something has changed over the last 8 weeks. It appears our protest by 3,082 
people from 78 countries, in which 101,611 protest emails were sent, seems to 
have deeply embarrassed the Malaysian government. Immediately after our alert 
launched, references to plans by Malaysia‘s federal land agency to establish up 
to 100,000 hectares of oil palm plantations in the heart of Brazil's Amazon 
rainforest were systematically removed from FELDA's Internet servers. And 
Streamyx, the monopoly Internet service provider in Malaysia, stopped 
delivering emails referring to Malaysia's global rainforest for oil palm land 
grab. 

Subsequently it has become known that Sime Darby, a Malaysian palm oil 
producer, plans to invest $800 million for 200,000 hectares (500,000 acres) of 
palm oil and rubber plantations in Liberia. FELDA already has large holdings at 
the expense of rainforests in Papua New Guinea, and oil palm biodiesel plant 
investments in the U.S. Please send/resend the updated protest email, asking 
for confirmation that FELDA will no longer consider developing oil palm in the 
Amazon or Papua New Guinea rainforests, and will stop private Malaysian 
industry from doing so as well.

TAKE ACTION NOW:
http://www.climateark.org/shared/alerts/send.aspx?id=amazon_oil_palm

ORIGINAL ALERT:

Malaysia‘s Federal Land Development Authority (FELDA) will soon break ground on 
a joint venture with a Brazilian firm to establish 30,000-100,000 hectares (ha; 
75,000 – 250,000 acres of oil palm plantations in the heart of Brazil's Amazon 
rainforest. Similar oil palm development continues to devastate Asia-Pacific's 
rainforests, and increasingly the world, with some thirty square miles of 
carbon and biodiversity rich habitat being cleared a day to provide cooking oil 
and transport biodiesel.  Oil palm agrofuel is heralded as a climate change 
mitigation measure, yet the initial rainforest clearance leads to much more 
carbon release than its production and use avoids.

Large scale biofuel production runs counter to urgently addressing climate 
change and threatens to cause more deforestation, hunger, human rights abuses, 
and degradation of soil and water. Global ecological sustainability and local 
well-being depend critically upon ending all industrial development in the 
world's remaining old forests -- including plantations, logging, mining and 
dams. The amount of primary and old growth forests that have been lost has 
already overshot the carrying capacity of Earth. Globally there are not enough 
old forests to maintain climatic and hydrological cycles, meet local forest 
dwellers' needs, and to maintain ecosystems and the biosphere in total. Local 
peoples must be assisted to fully protect, restore and benefit from intact, 
standing forests.

TAKE ACTION NOW:
http://www.climateark.org/shared/alerts/send.aspx?id=amazon_oil_palm

DISCUSS THIS ALERT:
http://www.rainforestportal.org/issues/2009/05/updated_alert_malaysian_govt_d.asp

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