 
            Open Letter to Financial Institutions on Pulp Investment
Rainforest Rescue joined sixty environmental and social organizations, including a dozen Indonesian groups, in sending an open letter to financial institutions across the globe asking for assurance that they will not invest in pulp and paper industry projects associated with deforestation and human right abuses in Indonesia.
Asia Pulp and Paper (APP), one of the world’s top three producers of pulp and paper often linked to destruction of forests and peatlands, is planning to build one of the world’s largest new pulp mills in South Sumatra.
Read the open letter below:
OPEN LETTER TO FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
6 November 2012
Dear Sir/Madam,
With this letter the 60 undersigned non-governmental organisations (NGOs) wish to ask you to carefully screen any pulp industry investment projects related to Indonesia, such as new mills, particularly those of companies associated with the Sinar Mas Group, notably Asia Pulp & Paper (APP).
Our concern is the environmental and social consequences of the massive destruction of natural forests that can be shown to be linked to past and current over-capacity in pulp milling plants in Indonesia. We would contend, however, that investment in further milling capacity that relies on natural forest or utilizes land without the free, prior and informed consent of affected communities carries considerable reputational hazard and economic risk to financial institutions.
Our concern is heightened by reports in the Indonesian and trade press that APP is preparing to build a new pulp mill in Sumatra in Indonesia. This would reportedly be one of the world’s biggest pulp mills1, with a planned production of between 1.5 and 2.0 million tonnes per year.
The undersigned NGOs are very concerned about the threat any such new mill might pose to the remaining natural forests in Sumatra and beyond. According to a recent estimate by Sumatra-based NGO coalition Eyes on the Forest, APP has pulped more than 2 million hectares of tropical forests in Sumatra since it started pulp production there in 19842.
Drainage of deep peat soils both for natural forest clearance and for plantation establishment is an issue of global concern in relation to climate change3, 4, 5. Impacts on indigenous peoples and local communities6 and the role of habitat destruction in pushing Sumatra’s elephant to critically endangered status, and its tigers and elephants into deadly conflicts with people and in some cases local extinctions have activated civil society campaigns globally7, 8, 9, 10, 11. It has been reported that three wood suppliers of APP are among the 14 companies which the Ministry of Environment has under examination for possible liability suits over environmental damages12. Four wood suppliers who also supply APP have so far been implicated before courts in the proven bribery of public officials in connection with the issuing of licenses to clear certain natural forest areas13, 14, 15, 16, 17. APP has lost a number of high-profile customers (such as Disney, Hasbro, Mattel, Unilever, Nestle, Danone, Xerox, Mondi) in recent years, as a result of concerns about its deforestation practices, community conflict and the business and reputational risk to buyers18, 19, 20.
APP has put considerable resources into trumpeting its sustainability credentials, but this campaign has been undercut by the company’s failure to meet its own publicised commitments in protecting forest areas it has previously designated as tiger sanctuary21, 22,23, forest areas it has identified as high conservation value forests for protection24, 25 and forest areas it has promoted as part of the Giam Siak Kecil-Bukit Batu UNESCO Man and Biosphere Reserve26. It has committed to sole plantation sourcing for its pulp supplies by 200427, 200728 and 200929 and missed all these self-imposed deadlines30. In its most recent (2012) sustainability roadmap it is clear APP intends to rely on natural forest clearance beyond 2015, a situation which will be exacerbated by the addition of any new pulping capacity31, 32, 33, 34, 35.
Some of the tactics employed in campaigning on APP’s behalf have also come under question 36 and independent sustainability certification agencies have rejected APP’s claims of their endorsement37.
We would suggest that special caution is required in relation to Sinar Mas, APP and companies associated with them, in view of the economic risks of adding pulp production capacity in large increments despite manifestly inadequate pulp supplies outside of their continuing and increasingly controversial assault on natural forests.
Financial institutions should particularly note the circumstances and consequences of the previous failure of APP’s business model, graphically illustrated when APP declared a moratorium on the servicing of $US 14 billion in debt in 2001 and was subsequently delisted from the New York Stock Exchange38, 39. Although many of the details remain unclear, this resulted in substantial and unresolved losses to financial institutions and investors.
Much controversy still rages around this default. APP currently faces US court orders to pay back more than $900 million in defaulted debt to US creditors, but the company continues for various reasons to delay in complying with asset disclosure or payment orders40. There are indications that environmental covenants agreed to with export credit agencies for the restructuring of debt have not been complied with, something that NGOs are continuing to pursue with the institutions concerned41, 42, 43.
Given the above, we would welcome your assurance that you would not be investing in or supporting any investment in increased pulp milling capacity by companies associated with the Sinar Mas Group.
The issue is one that all the undersigned NGOs – and others – feel strongly about, and will continue to monitor and campaign on.
We look forward to your response and would also welcome any opportunity to further brief you on the issue. Please send your response to sergio.baffoni@environmentalpaper.eu.
Sincerely,
Abetnego Tarigan, Executive Director, WALHI, Friends of the Earth Indonesia, Indonesia
 Muslim Rasyid, Kordinator Jikalahari, Indonesia
 Aidil Fitri Wahana Bumi Hijau, South Sumatra, Indonesia
 Usman Gumanti, Ketua AMAN Jambi, Indonesia
 Jaringan Masyarakat, Gambut Jambi (JMG-J), Indonesia
 Persatuan Petani Jambi (PPJ), Indonesia
 Umi Syamsiatun, Yayasan CAPPA – Community Alliance for Pulp and Paper Advocacy and Ecological Justice, Indonesia
 Hariansyah Usman, Director, WALHI Riau, Indonesia
 Rudiansyah, WALHI Jambi, Indonesia
 Tandyono Bawor Purbaya, Coordinator, Program Community Law Empowerment, HuMA, Indonesia
 Harry Oktavian, Scale Up, Center for Natural Resource Conflict Resolution Assistance, Indonesia
 Y.L. Franky, Director, Yayasan PUSAKA, Indonesia
 Diki Kurniawan, Program Manager of Policy & Advocacy, Conservation Community WARSI, Indonesia
 Rodney Taylor, Director Forests, WWF International, Switzerland
 Femke Bartels, Forest Network Director, Greenpeace International, The Netherlands
 Rebecca Tarbotton, Executive Director, Rainforest Action Network, USA
 Agnieszka Komoch, Friends of the Earth Europe, Belgium
 Johan Frijns, Director, BankTrack, The Netherlands
 Tom Griffiths, Forest Peoples Programme, UK
 Deborah Lambert Perez, ECA Watch, Belgium
 Jane Madgwick, Chief Executive, Wetlands International, The Netherlands
 Thomas Wenidoppler, Director, ECA Watch Austria
 Richard Wainwright, FERN, Belgium
 Sara Van Dyck, Bond Better Leefmilieu, Belgium
 Yu Xiaogang, Green Watershed, China
 Jaromir Blaha, Hnuti DUHA – Friends of the Earth Czech Republic
 Sini Eräjää, Suomen luonnonsuojeluliitto / Finnish Association for Nature Conservation, Finland
 Jürgen Wolters, ARA, Germany
 Anna Voß, Managing Director, BOS Deutschland, Germany
 Nicola Uhde, BUND – Friends of the Earth Germany
 Joanna Cary-Elwes, Elephant Family, Germany
 Evelyn Schönheit & Jupp Trauth, Forum Ökologie & Papier, Germany
 Heike Drillisch, Coordinator, GegenStroemung – CounterCurrent, Germany
 Klaus Schenck, Rettet den Regenwald e.V. – Rainforest Rescue, Germany
 Christoph Schmidt, Pro Wildlife, Germany
 Simone Hörner, Pro Regenwald, Germany
 Agnes Dieckmann, Urgewald, Germany
 Monika Schlicher, Watch Indonesia, Germany
 Vittorio Cogliati Dezza, Legambiente, Italy
 Giulia Franchi, Re-Common, Italy
 Fabio Ciconte, President, Terra!Onlus, Italy
 Yoshihiro Fujii, Finance GreenWatch, Japan
 Junichi Mishiba , Friends of the Earth Japan, Japan
 Yoshio Nishioka, Hutan Group, Japan
 Akira Harada, Japan Tropical Forest Action Network, Japan
 Graziella Cavlan, Nature Trust, Malta
 Lars Løvold, Director, Rainforest Foundation Norway
 Maria Huma, Polish Green Network, Poland
 Nuno Sequeira, Quercus, Portugal
 Alba Valle, Euronatura, Portugal
 Andrey Laletin, Chairman, Friends of the Siberian Forests, Russia
 Tom Kucharz, Ecologistas en Acción, Spain
 Almuth Ernsting, Biofuelwatch, UK/USA
 Simon Fairlie, The Land Magazine, UK
 Archie Beaton, Chlorine Free Products Association, USA
 Scott Quaranda, Dogwood Alliance, USA
 Michelle Chan, Director, Economic Policy Programs, Friends of the Earth USA
 Stephanie Fried, Ulu Foundation, USA
 Wim Dekok, Executive Director, World Animal Net, USA
 Teresa Perez, Coordinator, World Rainforest Movement, Uruguay