For
Release: 01/16/2007
WASHINGTON - Coffee lovers the world over are unknowingly
drinking coffee that was illegally grown inside one of
the world's most important national parks for tigers,
elephants and rhinos, according to an investigative report
released today by World Wildlife Fund (WWF).
Illegally
grown coffee from Indonesia is mixed with legally grown
coffee beans and sold to such companies as Kraft Foods
and Nestle among other major companies in the U.S. and
abroad.
WWF
tracked the illegal cultivation of coffee inside Indonesia's
remote Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park (BBS) all the
way through its export routes to multinational coffee
companies and the shelves of grocery stores across the
United States, Europe and Asia using satellite imaging,
interviews with coffee farmers and traders, and by monitoring
coffee trade routes. Trade of illegal coffee is possible
because neither exporters nor importers have any mechanisms
in place to prevent the illegal beans from entering the
supply chains.
Bukit
Barisan Selatan, a World Heritage Site on the southern
tip of Sumatra Island, is one of the few protected areas
where Sumatran tigers, elephants and rhinos coexist. It
has already lost nearly 30 percent of its forest cover
to illegal agriculture, most of which is for coffee production.
"No
consumer wants their morning cup of coffee to contribute
to the demise of endangered tigers," Carter Roberts,
President and CEO of WWF-US. "The findings in this
report illustrate the challenge of ensuring that global
trade respects environmental concerns. WWF works with
corporations and governments to find solutions that work
both for business and the environment."
Indonesia
is the world's second-largest exporter of robusta, a kind
of bean often used in instant and packaged coffee sold
in supermarkets. At least half the country's coffee is
exported through the port of Lampung, adjacent to the
national park.
WWF's
investigation found farmers growing coffee on more than
173 square miles of park land (about two-thirds the size
of Chicago) and producing more than 19,600 tons of coffee
there each year. Most wildlife has already abandoned the
sections of the park that have been illegally converted
to coffee plantations. Illegally grown coffee is exported
to at least 52 countries.
The
report determined that most of the companies buying the
coffee likely were unaware of its illegal origins. WWF
provided draft copies of the report's findings to the
top recipients of Lampung coffee tainted with illegal
beans from Bukit Barisan Selatan. The reaction of the
companies has been mixed. Some companies are currently
in discussion with WWF on how to avoid purchases of illegally
grown coffee, boost production of sustainably grown coffee
and restore wildlife habitat in the park, while others
have denied any purchasing of illegally grown coffee.
"These
companies can do better," continued Roberts. "The
multinational coffee companies mentioned in this report
should implement rigorous chain-of-custody controls to
ensure that they no longer buy illegally grown coffee,
as well as support park protection and restoration efforts."
WWF
is also asking involved coffee-buying companies to work
with local Sumatran growers and traders to provide incentives
to switch to sustainable coffee production outside the
park. The report recommends that Indonesian authorities
prevent further encroachment into the park and develop
regulations that prevent illegally grown coffee from infiltrating
international trade.
Worldwide,
WWF engages with a variety of businesses to improve their
product sourcing. Part of WWF's overall strategy is to
help companies find better ways to use their purchasing
power to promote better agricultural and forestry practices.
|