Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Acacia-Pulpwood-Plantation-in-Sumatra-27MZIFVSQZO3.htmlConceptually similarPeatland Pulpwood Plantation in RiauGP04KSRCompleted★★★★Peatland Pulpwood Plantation in RiauGP04KSQCompleted★★★★Forest Destruction in SumatraGP04GE7Completed★★★★Pulpwood Plantations in IndonesiaGP02EB1Completed★★★★Logging Road in IndonesiaGP02EAZCompleted★★★★Forest Destruction in SumatraGP02EB4Completed★★★★Cleared Pulpwood Concession in SumatraGP04GEOCompleted★★★★PT SRL Pulpwood Concession in RiauGP0STOE9DCompleted★★★★Forest Destruction in SumatraGP02EAKCompleted★★★★★★View AllGP04GE6Acacia Pulpwood Plantation in SumatraRainforest ringed by an access road and an acacia pulpwood plantation in the Sinar Mas group PT Satria Perkasa Agung concession on the Kampar Peninsula in Riau. PT SPA is a supplier to Asia Pulp and Paper (APP).Locations:Indonesia-Kampar Regency-Riau-Southeast Asia-SumatraDate:27 Oct, 2009Credit:© Ardiles Rante / GreenpeaceMaximum size:5120px X 3413pxKeywords:Acacia-Aerial view-APRIL-Asia Pulp and Paper (APP)-Climate (campaign title)-Climate change-Deforestation-Destruction-Forests (campaign title)-Forests (topography)-Green-KWCI (GPI)-Paper industry-Plantations-Rainforests-Sinar Mas Group-Trees-Tropical rainforestsShoot:Climate Defenders Camp in IndonesiaGreenpeace activists and local community set up a "Climate Defenders’ Camp", in the heart of the Indonesian rainforest on the threatened Kampar Peninsula in Sumatra. The Camp was built to bring urgent attention to the role that deforestation plays in driving dangerous climate change, a critical issue to be addressed at the COP15 United Nations Climate Change Conference in December in Copenhagen. The activists construct dams across the Kampar Peninsula, where forest destruction for plantations emits huge quantities of CO2 and has led Indonesia to become the world’s third largest climate polluter after China and the US. The forest peat soils in Kampar are particularly deep and store some 2 billion tones of carbon. They form one of the largest natural carbon stores on the planet and a significant global defense against global climate change. Much of the forest that once surrounded the Peninsula has been destroyed to make way for paper and palm oil plantations. Actress Melanie Laurent, and Chinese celebrities, pop star Xiao Wei and Beijing novelist Chun Sue, all join Greenpeace to speak out against forest destruction and climate change.Related Collections:APP Commits to End Deforestation (Photo and Video)