http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2684&Itemid=226

Playing the Greenwash Game 

Written by Gerry O'Kane
Wednesday, 08 September 2010 
Indonesia's Sinar Mas gets a dubious pass on an environmental sustainability 
audit 

As the world continues to debate the way it should look under the new realities 
of sustainability, global warming and environmental protection, beware the 
flood of 'greenwash'.

Greenwash, according to the dictionary, pertains to "activities by a company or 
an organization that are intended to make people think that it is concerned 
about the environment, even if its real business actually harms the 
environment." 

And what better example of that is the ongoing saga of palm oil and 
deforestation by the companies controlled by Indonesia's Widjaja family and 
grouped under the name Sinar Mas. The so-called audit that was released 
recently required closer reading than listening to the press pronouncements 
controlled by the company's public relations gurus, Bell Pottinger in both 
London and Jakarta.

It also shows how the world of corporate sponsorship and public relations work.
Although Bell Pottinger gained headlines around the world saying the audit had 
cleared Singapore-listed PT Sinar Mas Agro Resources and Technology of 
deforestation, it has only taken a couple of weeks for US fast-food chain 
Burger King to announce it was cancelling all palm oil contracts from the Sinar 
Mas group. Nestle, the world's biggest consumer products group, has also 
announced it would cancel contracts with Sinar Mas.

In a statement, Burger King said: "After completing a thorough review of the 
independent verification report conducted by Control Union Certification (CUC) 
and BSI Group, BKC believes the report has raised valid concerns about some of 
the sustainability practices of Sinar Mas's palm oil production and its impact 
on the rainforest. These practices are inconsistent with BKC's corporate 
responsibility commitments."

It concludes: "As a result, BKC has decided it will no longer purchase palm oil 
from Sinar Mas or its subsidiaries." That means that the 17.6 percent of palm 
oil sourced for Burger King global operations will now be bought from somewhere 
else. This would suggest that in spite of company executives and Bell Pottinger 
proclaiming to the world that the company had been vindicated and was innocent, 
it was untrue so far as Burger King's bosses were concerned.

Indeed to highlight just how far the process of greenwash has gone, the 
invitations to the London press conference gave the impression that global 
consumer products giant Unilever had given a thumbs up to the audit. 
Considering that Unilever had been one of the high-profile defectors from the 
Sinar Mas companies, it piqued reporters' interest.

What's of interest is that Unilever has remained tight-lipped about the audit 
and has made no press statements at all. All this should have been obvious 
during the rush to clear PT Smart and Sinar Mas, since their global crisis 
management public relations team at Bell Pottinger also represent, surprise, 
surprise, Unilever.

All things are open to interpretation. Burger King was not followed by Cargill, 
the world's largest trader of agricultural commodities. Cargill has said it 
will continue to trade with PT Smart and other Sinar Mas firms. It was: 
"...encouraged [that] PT SMART has acknowledged areas of non-compliance with 
the [Roundtable for Sustainable Palm Oil] and its own company policies, that it 
has committed to taking corrective actions and to strengthening its standard 
operating procedures to address these."

And further down in the release it acknowledges the detail we highlighted in 
the original audit; that the audit only covered PT Smart operations and 
excluded the previous operations and activities of the parent group, 
Singapore-listed Golden Agri-Resources Limited, which is not RSPO certified. 
But Cargill would discuss its future with Golden Agri-Resources too.

In the interest of balance, Cargill does have a 'plan'. It has a policy of only 
using RSPO certified products. Indeed some of its own plantations were among 
the first to gain such accreditation, and it plans to work towards that. While 
Cargill,one of the world's biggest agribusiness concerns, is now firmly in the 
sights of the next Greenpeace pressure campaign, expect less than explosive 
responses from some of the other environmental groups. The company made 
US$107.9 billion in sales and other revenues and its profits were $2.6 billion 
this year (actually profits were down by 22 percent from the year before) and 
it knows how to spend it.

Without pre-empting Conservation International's (CI) reaction to any future 
Greenpeace campaign against Cargill, it may find it hard to turn away the 
US$1.5 million donation for a biodiversity conservation project in Ore, Papua 
New Guinea from Cargill and Flora and Fauna International will be loathe to 
hand back cash for its orangutan project in Kalimantan.

Now watch out for the greenwash again and bear in mind the words of Lord Bell 
of that oft-mentioned PR company, who reportedly told a British newspaper 
examining the ethics of taking dubious foreign contracts, "I am not an 
international ethics committee."

Gerry O'Kane blogs as Green Business 
(http://asiancorrespondent.com/green-business-blog) for The Asian 
Correspondent, where this originally appeared. 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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