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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Actions and News: May 22 was international day of biodiversity

Welcome to YouChoose, a blog about individual climate action.

May 22 was international day of biodiversity.

Read the World Economic Forum Report on the global state of biodiversity and how loss of species can be reversed.

Deforestation is one of the main causes of biodiversity loss, for this reason the European Union last month introduced a ban on products from recently deforested areas. I doubt this ban will be easily enforceable. The US is taking steps to halt deforestation, restore habitats, and restore the great biodiversity of the North American ecosystem. Read from the WWF which actions have been pledged by the current administration. Will we go from words to deeds? We need to make our voice heard wherever we are and urge our governments to act. If you are in the USA please go to The Nature Conservancy petition page and tell congress to pass the Recovering America’s Wildlife Act

What else can we do as individuals?

Keep the pressure on! Think about how much forests and biodiversity mean to you and do your part to end deforestation by boycotting products that are the main drivers of destruction: cattle and livestock industry (which also drives conversion of forests to soy plantations), palm oil, cocoa, timber from old growth forests and endangered trees. The loss of even one species can not be undone. Do your part, stay informed, look for the provenance of what you buy and avoid products from high risk companies and locations.

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World water day 2023 (and what we can do)

Welcome to YouChoose, a blog about individual climate action.

The UN 2023 water conference was held last month in NY. Water scarcity may very well become the most important side effect of climate change and deforestation. The link between deforestation and drought has been illustrated in a recent Nature article : Smith, C., Baker, J.C.A. & Spracklen, D.V.: Tropical deforestation causes large reductions in observed precipitation, Nature 615, 270–275 (2023). You can read the article HERE.

Part of the UN conference outcome was the announcement of the largest river and wetland restoration initiative in history, proposed by the governments of Colombia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ecuador, Gabon, Mexico and Zambia. If you want to know more about the freshwater challenge and the importance of freshwater read about it on the WWF web page.

How about the US? Do you know that about half of the original wetland of the US has been destroyed and about 30% of the endangered species in this country live in wetland areas? The loss or degradation of wetlands puts entire ecosystems at risk. Read HERE, from the Xerces Society, on the importance of wetlands for biodiversity. One big threat to wetlands comes from pesticide use for agriculture and gardening. As homeowners we need to stop using chemicals in our lawns and gardens, especially herbicides and systemic pesticides. In our quest for the perfect lawn we introduce in the environment and in the water toxic chemicals that are deadly for pollinators and aquatic life.

Check out here from the Xerces society a list of deadly products easily available on the shelves of home improvement stores. Lawn fertilizers are just as bad. These products are marketed with catchy names such as “Green Light”, “Shrub Protect”, “Weed ‘n feed” but underneath the friendly and flowery packages are extremely toxic chemical that destroy the ecosystem. Please spread the word with your neighbors and encourage them to stop using chemical products in the backyard!

Keep the pressure on! Do your part to end deforestation by boycotting products that are the main drivers of destruction: cattle and livestock industry (which also drives conversion of forests to soy plantations), palm oil, timber from old growth forests and endangered trees.

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Actions and News: March 21 was international day of forests

Welcome to YouChoose, a blog about individual climate action.

Forests support the very existence of our planet. They sustain biodiversity, provide us with much needed precipitation, clean air, water, and so much more. Deforestation is an existential threat to our planet.

Read here in the UN page the meaning of this day and why is vital that we stop deforestation and restore what was destroyed.

Keep the pressure on! Think about how much forests mean to you and do your part to end deforestation by boycotting products that are the main drivers of destruction: cattle and livestock industry (which also drives conversion of forests to soy plantations), palm oil, timber from old growth forests and endangered trees.

Do you want to meet one of the many forgotten victims of deforestation? Get to know one of the most endangered primates in this article from the Palm Oil Detectives.

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What is to be done

Welcome to YouChoose, a blog where we explore ways of living sustainably. This week I wanted to share a few thoughts about the recent Glasgow climate conference that ended this past week.

After all the news and coverage the conference ended as expected with little agreement among the parties. It is hard to convert goodwill into action when countries economies are at stake.

For those of us who are convinced of the urgency of the matter it is easy to feel discouraged and come to the conclusion that we have no control over the decision making process. What is lost in the process is the notion that we are the buyers that are at the end of the supply chain. If we remove the buyer from the process the producers are forced to change. What can we do as single individuals to achieve what the world conferences constantly fail to achieve? In this post let’s go over one of the topics discussed, one that I consider perhaps the most important: Trees and forests.

Deforestation poses an existential threat to our Earth and to our very physical and spiritual being. It causes loss of biodiversity, extinction of species, soil erosion, air quality deterioration, and a change in the precipitation patterns that affects the entire hydrologic cycle. In addition, it causes the loss of life and spiritual heritage of communities whose livelihood depends on the forests. It is not an exaggeration to say that by erasing forests we are erasing our very soul. Many, but not all, of the countries participating in the meeting have agreed to stop deforestation by 2030. Whether we believe it or not is a different story.

Powerful economic interests are at the source of the problem. Let’s have a look at the economic drivers of deforestation and how we as consumers are part of it. Deforestation is mostly driven by these sectors: Agriculture (mostly palm oil, soy, cocoa and coffee), mining and logging (mostly industrial logging, mining, oil and gas), urbanization: (urban expansion with related consequences).

Although there are complex issues behind each sector the majority of the products causing deforestation are found in our homes and on our tables. In other words we are financing deforestation with our shopping. Here are some things we can do to avoid that our money is used to destroy the planet.

What finances agriculture driven deforestation?

Among companies responsible for deforestation we find the biggest retail chains. Their shelves are packed with meat and palm oil ingredients sourced with the destruction of forests. Amazon Watch (amazonwatch.org) keeps a record of the commodities companies that cause the largest deforestation, the banks that finance them, and the retail stores that buy from them. You can check it out to find out where your money is going. For those of us who don’t want to finance large scale environmental damages avoiding meat in general and specifically meat from fast foods goes a long way. Fast food companies are among the largest customers of meat suppliers known for their destructive practices.

Just as meat, leather products are linked to deforestation. The fashion industry, including luxury brands, has a very poor record of checking the provenance of their leather materials.

Another important step is to avoid all products with palm oil (Yes! you can survive without it). Many grocery stores use palm oil in their own baked good, in addition to purchase from companies known for their poor environmental records. Palm oil of untraceable origin is also widely used in big brand cosmetic industry.

Bananas (except perhaps organically grown), avocados, cocoa and coffee have a negative environmental impact, unless grown sustainably. Be careful when buying and only buy products with certified sustainable practices.

What finances logging and mining driven deforestation?

High demand for new furniture and wood products is a driver of deforestation. You may be surprised to find out that many popular furniture stores in the US are fueling deforestation. I myself was fooled long time ago when I bought a dining set in a major US furniture store because I trusted the word of the store employee who ensured me that their wood was sourced by traceable suppliers. I later found out that the store in question had a poor record of choosing their wood suppliers and acquired wood from unverified sources. I never forgave myself for not having researched better the store ahead of time.

For this reason it is important to research the store record on deforestation before purchasing furniture and to avoid furniture made from tropical woods. Unfortunately too many furniture stores still have no problems dealing with tropical woods from Asia and South America, wood from endangered Eastern European forests, African and North American old growth forests without controlling the entire supply chain.

Gold, lithium, and rare earths elements are used in the jewelry business and in the manufacturing of electronics and batteries. An average phone can easily last more than 5 years, yet on the average people replace their phones every 2.5 years. Our continuous demand for the latest smart phone model contributes to deforestation. Keeping our smart phones and tablets as long as we can is a good practice to reduce the demand for always new devices.

This week the EU, whose insatiable hunger for meat, soy, coffee, cocoa, and palm oil makes it one of the largest financier of deforestation announced that they are considering blocking the imports of such goods from high risk regions unless the products are certified deforestation free. I am sure the proposed legislation will find much opposition from big conglomerates. We consumers however can control where our money goes by researching companies and following the money trail. Although it is not possible to be 100% sure of what we buy we can certainly be better informed. So this Christmas instead of asking for a new smart phone, a new piece of jewelry, a new SUV, or thinking of replacing the entire living room because we are just tired of it let’s all reflect on what we can give back to our Earth and instead plant a tree or make a small donation towards a reforestation effort.

The YouChoose app provides several links and information on unsustainable wood and food, hopefully the information is useful.

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