Halloween without palm oil

Welcome to ChooseSustainable.org a blog about individual climate action. As usual, my October post is a reminder of the destructive properties of palm oil, a common ingredient in Halloween candies.

Palm oil is one of the most devastating commodities, driving deforestation, the extinction of countless species, and rampant human right abuses. Unfortunately it is found found in mass produced Halloween candies as well as other countless products. This Halloween take a few extra minutes and read the ingredients to avoid candies that contain palm oil.

Below is a link to a list of candies without palm oil. However it is always better to read the label to make sure ingredients haven’t changed.

The Orangutan alliance post linked below is a few year old, but it discusses the Roundtable of Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) certification.

Don’t be fooled by RSPO certifications. The only way to stop deforestation is the “Palm oil free” label.

Industrial deforestation, driven by palm oil demand, is one of the largest contributor to climate change and the largest driver of loss of biodiversity and mass extinction on the planet. Don’t finance the suffering of countless species with your money, this Halloween go palm oil free.

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Actions and News: August 19 is International Orangutan Day

Welcome to YouChoose, a blog about individual climate action.

Tomorrow, August 19th is International Orangutan Day. Read more about these primates from the WWF website:

https://wwf.panda.org/discover/knowledge_hub/endangered_species/great_apes/orangutans/

Orangutans are critically endangered from loss of habitat due to deforestation from the palm oil industry. A new tool developed in collaboration with the University of Chicago Data Science Institute tracks deforestation linked to 15 major brands that we use every day.

https://palmwatch.inclusivedevelopment.net/

There you can check out your preferred brand and boycott products that contain palm oil. How about sustainable palm oil? That simply does not exist! Read more below about RSPO and greenwashing.

https://palmoildetectives.com

The good news is that there are alternatives to brands that use palm oil in their products. Please support those brands as much as you can. Sometime it takes just a little bit of research to find new products. I have been able to replace all my soaps and food with palm oil free alternatives at no additional cost!

The survival of Orangutans starts from our grocery list

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Helpful info: Below are the food items most likely to contain palm oil. Check out ingredients before buying

  • Doughnuts
  • Candies
  • PopCorn
  • Chocolate spreads
  • Fast food, fried items, and hamburgers
  • Crackers, cereals, cookies, pancake mixes, soups, bread products
  • Bakery products in grocery stores
  • Frozen meals, ice creams, frozen waffles, and pancakes
  • Hand soap bars and liquid
  • Dishwasher soap
  • Laundry soap
  • Cosmetics (lipstick, foundation)

Beware that beauty product are not required to disclose the full ingredient list, here is a list of ingredients that reveal the presence of palm oil, keep this list handy when shopping, make sure that they are palm oil free:

  • Sodium Palmate
  • Ammonium Laurel Sulfate
  • Cocamidopropyl Betaine
  • Glycerin, Glycerine
  • Lauric acid
  • Sodium Cocate
  • Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate
  • Sodium Laureth (Lauryl) Sulfate
  • Sodyum Lauryl
  • Ether Sulfate
  • Sodium Lauryl Sulfite
  • Sodium Palm Kernelate
  • Sodium Stearate
  • Stearic Acid
  • Tocopherols

This Halloween choose sustainable

Welcome to ChooseSustainable.org a blog about individual climate action. It’s almost Halloween and you have probably added to your grocery list a bag of candies to distribute to kids in a few weeks.

It takes a small effort to celebrate an Earth friendly Halloween by avoiding candies that contain palm oil. Just look at the list of ingredients and select candies that don’t contribute to deforestation. Is that simple!

Don’t be fooled by sustainable palm oil labels, there is no such a thing as sustainable palm oil. Read here from the World Wildlife Fund about the link between big money and deforestation. Here you can find the palm oil buyers scorecard and here you can search the score of industries that make Halloween candies such as Mondelez International. Even the best scoring companies such as Ferrero can’t entirely account for the provenance of their palm oil.

Industrial deforestation, driven by palm oil demand, is one of largest contributor to climate change and the largest driver of loss of biodiversity and mass extinction on the planet. Don’t finance the suffering of countless species with your money, this Halloween go palm oil free.

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Living without palm oil: You can do it!

Welcome to YouChoose, a blog about individual climate action. We talked in previous posts about the importance of reducing the demand for palm oil. This week I would like to talk about food products that are more likely to contain palm oil.

It is a fact that, unless we stop buying, companies will keep deforesting. Avoiding palm oil is one of the actions we can take to stop deforestation. You will hear all kind of reasons why palm oil is actually good for the planet and how avoiding palm oil will do more harm than good. Don’t fall for the greenwashing. The skyrocketing demand for the cheap oil is fueled not by any necessity, but by an increase in demand for junk and fast food. The big conglomerates responsible for deforestation are also the biggest producers of junk food. Their palm oil suppliers are linked to human right violations, intimidation, and destruction of indigenous community. For this reason reducing the amount of junk and packaged food that we purchase is a fundamental step to invert the trend. When we purchase food containing or prepared with palm oil we are contributing to deforestation. Unfortunately there is no nice way to put this. Read here from Palm Oil Detectives how “sustainable palm oil” doesn’t really exist. It is just something invented to make consumers feel good and enable the continuous destruction of the rain forest.

Here is a list of foods where you are likely to find palm oil. Keep this in mind next time you go to the grocery store. I assure you that, after eliminating palm oil, my life hasn’t changed much, but my health and wallet may have actually improved.

  • Doughnuts: Fast food chains use palm oil for frying. I used to like doughnuts, but stopped buying them entirely and never looked back.
  • Candies: Almost all chocolate candies and bars in grocery stores contain palm oil. I used to buy some for my daughter when she was a kid or for Halloween. After realizing what I was doing, I stopped entirely purchasing them and lived happily everafter. I also noticed that, when I explained to my daughter the reason for it, she agreed and never asked for them anymore.
  • PopCorn: Please read the ingredients in microwave-ready popcorn packages and you will discover that all of them are made with palm oil.
  • Chocolate spreads: Products such as hazelnut spreads and sometime peanut butter spreads list palm oil among their ingredients.
  • Fast food, fried items, and hamburgers: Major fast food chains use palm oil for frying, especially in Asia, but also in the US. I know this is a little bit hard but limiting fast food as much as possible is important and not that depriving. It may actually be good for us.
  • Crackers, cereals, cookies, pancake mixes, soups, bread products: I read ingredients carefully and find palm oil in all these items. I invite you to do the same and look for available alternatives. There are few brands that don’t use palm oil.
  • Bakery products in grocery stores: A large percent of baked good in US grocery stores contains palm oil. In the grocery store where I shop, palm oil is found in almost all baked goods. I encourage you to check it out next time you shop and look for alternatives.
  • Frozen meals, ice creams, frozen waffles, and pancakes: Palm oil in ice cream? There are things I wouldn’t buy even if they were good for the environment.

Please share this post and do your part advocating a stop to palm oil consumption.

Comments? Send me an email at info@choosesustainable.org