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| Canada: Greenpeace investigation reveals Kimberly-Clark ignored company environmental policy, misinformed shareholders
18
April
2008
A Greenpeace investigative report into
Kimberly-Clark's (KMB.NYSE) role in the devastation of Ontario's Kenogami
Forest has found the company ignored its own environmental policy and
misinformed its shareholders about aspects of its sourcing from the Boreal
Forest. The tissue giant and maker of Kleenex and Cottonelle meets with its
shareholders today in Irving, Texas.
The report, Cut and Run, uses government information, independent audits,
public records and satellite mapping to document Kimberly-Clark's management
and logging of the Kenogami Forest near Thunder Bay. It alleges the company
violated its previous policy not to use "environmentally significant"
old-growth fibre in its consumer products. Its executives have repeatedly
claimed the boreal fibre used in the company's products comes primarily from
"waste," despite healthy forests being logged to produce their pulp.
Since Kimberly-Clark began logging in Kenogami in 1937, 71 per cent of
this forest has been fragmented and woodland caribou have been driven from
67 per cent of the area. Wolverines have been driven out of the forest
completely. Over 80 per cent of the Kenogami Forest has been classified by a
provincial government task group as inadequately protected, and 78 per cent as
high priority for conservation.
"When Kimberly-Clark arrived in the Kenogami Forest, it was a healthy,
vibrant ecosystem," said Christy Ferguson, a forests campaigner with
Greenpeace. "Today it is unable to sustain healthy wildlife populations and
its old-growth is projected to collapse-largely because of products that are
used once and then thrown away."
Even though Kimberly-Clark has not directly managed the forest since
2004, the company still buys large amounts of fibre from Kenogami.
Kimberly-Clark's updated policy, adopted in 2007, adds new disappointment by
permitting the purchase of fibre from old-growth forests. Fibre from intact
forests, the habitat of threatened species, continues to be permitted under
the new policy.
"Kimberly-Clark's shareholders should be alarmed at the company's ongoing
support for logging operations that are environmentally destructive and a
source of multiple social conflicts," said Ferguson. "Shareholders, corporate
customers and everyday consumers have a responsibility to hold Kimberly-Clark
accountable for its actions."
Nine First Nations communities are presently involved in a legal case
against the Ontario provincial government and the companies managing the
Kenogami Forest. These Aboriginal communities have been left out of the
forest's planning, management and economic benefits, despite treaty rights.
Workers from the forest's Terrace Bay mill have been on strike for over two
years.
A shareholder resolution sponsored by Harrington Investments to create a
board-level sustainability committee will be voted on at today's shareholder
meeting. Greenpeace supports this resolution as an important step towards
increasing recycled materials in Kimberly-Clark products, respecting First
Nations' rights and ending the logging of endangered forests.
Organization name: Greenpeace Country: Canada
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