Posts Tagged ‘RAN’

This holiday season, let’s try to avoid destroying the rainforest

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

ran-book-guide.png

When you crack open a fresh copy of Where the Wild Things Are, do you smell rainforests in Indonesia being decimated? Well apparently, that actually happens.

Our friends at the bad-ass Rainforest Action Network just pulled together a shopping guide for the kiddies in your life. Download the 2-page guide here (pdf), or read more about the project at ran.org.

Rainforest Action Network Targets Fashion Houses

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

Would you want a beautiful shopping bag if it meant clearcutting a section of rainforest in Indonesia?

  • Rainforest Action Network, an activist group (and TILE Cause) that focuses on corporate responsibility when it comes to rainforests, seems to have made a major victory in the fashion industry by targeting a supplier of high-end shopping bags.
  • In a letter to 100 fashion firms, RAN explained that paper goods supplier Pak 2000 had very close ties with Asia Pulp and Paper, a company notorious for damaging the environment in order to harvest wood pulp. (Pak 2000 has since indicated that it may soon cut ties with the company.)
  • Several large clients have since ended their relationships with Pak 2000, many citing normal business relations. But some companies, like H&M, credited the supplier shift to RAN’s letter specifically, and RAN says it is talking to 20 additional companies about switching to sustainable bag suppliers.

Facts & Figures

  • Some current and former clients of Pak 2000 include: Barney’s, Billabong, Cartier, Chanel, Coach, Estee Lauder, Gucci, J.Crew, Marc Jacobs, Montblanc, Movado, and Ralph Lauren.
  • Deforestation is responsible for a fifth of total greenhouse gas emissions.
  • The United States and China are the largest producers of greenhouse gases, followed by Indonesia, where Asia Pulp and Paper does much of its wood harvesting.

Best Quote

“Because Pak 2000 is selling to very high-profile companies, it’s a good place to start our work, to introduce this issue to a new sector, the fashion industry.” – Lafcadio Cortesi, RAN’s Forest Campaign Director