Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Campus Organizations Launch Campaign to Recover 75% of Paper Waste for Recycling by 2015

This past Earth Day, campuses across North America were called to take part in the RePaper Campus Challenge – a movement to increase sustainability on college campuses by recovering 75% of campus paper waste for recycling by the year 2015. The campaign is headquartered in the not-for-profit organization Environmental Paper Network’s RePaper Project – a program focusing on increasing paper recovery to best maximize recycled content in paper manufacturing. The Campus Challenge will teach students, faculty and staff on higher education campuses about the impacts of paper, and how best to recover it for effective recycling.

Pam Blackledge, the RePaper Project coordinator, is spearheading this effort. She says, “While campuses are making strides to become ‘carbon neutral’ and making major shifts toward long-term sustainability, improving their paper practices is a significant step in the right direction. We applaud our higher education institutions for being leaders in sustainable practices, and we encourage each and every one to capture 75% of their paper waste for recycling.”

When asked why paper recycling is so important on campuses today, Blackledge responded “With over 20 million students in the United States today, each using at least 700 pounds of paper a year, campuses have a huge opportunity to make a difference. Paper is often ignored as having an immense environmental impact, mostly because we use it every day – it’s everywhere we look. But by creating paper practices that matter to the environment such as reducing waste, recovering more paper for recycling, and purchasing recycled content paper, a campus can make a dramatic impact on their sustainability goals.”

Participating campus organizations currently include College and University Recycling Coalition (CURC), National Wildlife Federation Campus Ecology, RecycleMania!, and Recycling Organizations of North America Higher Education Program (RONA U).

For more information about the RePaper Campus Challenge, visit the webpage www.repaperproject.org, or contact Pam Blackledge at pam@environmentalpaper.org, along with any of the above organizations.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Release: Rainforest Action Network Finds Disney Tied to Forest Destruction and Endangered Tiger Loss


Mickey Mouse Costumed Protesters Hang 35-Foot Banner Blocking Main Entrance to Disney Headquarters; Arrests Likely

Hi res photos available at ran.org/disneyphotos

Follow @ranactions on Twitter for live updates

Burbank, CA—Today, activists with Rainforest Action Network (RAN), costumed as Mickey and Minnie Mouse, unfurled a 35-foot banner reading, “Disney: Destroying Indonesia’s Rainforests,” blocking The Walt Disney Company’s two-story main entrance at its Los Angeles headquarters. The group is protesting the iconic company after lab results found that paper used in Disney’s kids books contained fiber from endangered Indonesian rainforests.

“Disney is printing children’s books with paper that is driving the destruction of Indonesia’s rainforests,” said Robin Averbeck, Rainforest Action Network’s Forest Campaigner. “It is past time for Disney to catch up with its peers and adopt a policy that guarantees tiger extinction and deforestation will no longer be found in kids’ books or in any products the company sells. Of all companies, Disney should not be harming the earth’s real magic kingdoms.” 

Disney is the largest publisher of children’s books in the world, producing over 50 million books and 30 million magazines a year. However, Disney has remained an industry laggard when it comes to forest protection. RAN has found that itspaper policy, released in March, fails to prevent controversial fiber and suppliers like Asian Pulp and Paper (APP) and APRIL (Indonesia’s largest pulp and paper companies) from entering its products.

In March of 2010, RAN hired an independent lab, Integrated Paper Services (IPS), to conduct tests on the fiber found in children’s books published by the top ten U.S. publishers. Eight publishers, including Scholastic and Simon &Schuster, have since committed to eliminating controversial fiber from theirsupply chains. Though RAN has been in discussion with Disney for over a year, the company remains behind those industry leaders.

“Disney’s paper buying practices are driving some of the world's most iconic rainforest creatures towards extinction, this is the dark side of Disney,” said Lafcadio Cortesi, Rainforest Action Network’s Forest Campaign Director. “In fact, the very creatures Disney features in its classic film ‘The Jungle Book’ are threatened by the paper Disney's children's books are printed on.”

Last week, international news sources reported the release of footage from motion detector cameras showing 12 of the estimated 400 critically endangered Sumatran tigers, including mothers with their cubs, in Indonesian forests. These forests are under imminent threat of being cleared by the pulp and paper industry.

Indonesia’s rainforests, home to unique species like the orangutan and the Sumatran tiger, are under severe threat from paper companies that rely on clearing natural rainforests and peatlands. The carbon emissions from this large-scale deforestation has made Indonesia the world’s third largest greenhouse gas polluting country, behind only the U.S. and China.

Rainforest Action Network is asking The Walt Disney Company to eliminate its use of controversial Indonesian fiber and publicly sever all financial ties with APP and APRIL and their affiliates until key reforms are adopted. RAN is also asking Disney to implement a comprehensive company-wide paper policy and rigorous due diligence procedures that ensure it is rainforest safe.
For more information, please visit www.ran.org/disney.
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Rainforest Action Network runs hard-hitting campaigns to break North America’s fossil fuels addiction, protect endangered forests and Indigenous rights, and stopdestructive investments around the world through education, grassroots organizing, and non-violent direct action. For more information, please visit: www.ran.org