Palm oil business killing orangutans: French filmmaker
March 2nd, 2011 - 12:52 pm ICT by IANSKolkata, March 2 (IANS) China, Europe and India are fuelling the high demand for palm oil, in turn leading to the rapid destruction of rainforests and the rampant killing of orangutans in Indonesia, says renowned French wildlife filmmaker Patrick Rouxel.
“Poachers and illegal traffickers are on a killing spree of orangutans. They are destroying the rainforests for palm oil plantations which are in high demand in the markets of China and Europe,” Rouxel told IANS in an interview here.
“If such deforestation goes on, the rainforests will cease to exist and it will severely affect the ecological balance of the Southeast Asian region, giving rise to greenhouse gases,” he said.
Rouxel’s 48-minute documentary film “Green”, winner of the WWF Golden Panda award 2010, revolves round the journey of an orphan orangutan named Green which is a victim of deforestation and resource exploitation in Indonesia. The film is an emotional journey of Green’s last days.
He was in Kolkata in connection with a wildlife film festival last month and his film screened here.
Rouxel blames the consumer markets in China, India and Europe for the thriving business of palm oil and the paper and pulp industry in the populous Southeast Asian region.
“The main reason behind this thriving business is the market demands of Europe, China, and India. Through my film, I try to educate the consumers that their demand is leading to the extinction of the rainforests,” he said.
“Actually, I myself recovered a baby orangutan from one of the palm oil factories in Indonesia while I was there shooting a film on wildlife. The baby orangutan was in a very bad condition. She died a few days later,” said Rouxel, his voice choking.
“The day is not far when the entire rainforests of Indonesia will be destroyed because of palm oil plantations, thereby leading to extinction of species such as orangutans and Sumatran tigers,” said Rouxel.
Rouxel has spent considerable time in the rainforests of Congo, Amazon and Indonesia. “Green” is his fifth documentary on the ill effects of deforestation.
“The poachers kill the mother orangutans, snatch way their babies and sell them at high prices. The baby orangutans are kept as pets in very unhygienic conditions,” he said.
“If this is the behaviour and the way we treat our ancestors, the orangutans, then I have nothing to say. Palm oil is very cheap and that is why it is in high demand,” he said.
Palm oil is a kind of edible oil derived from palm trees and is extensively used in many industries, including the manufacture of bio-diesel.
Rouxel has also faced personal danger in his quest to spread awareness about the issue, but he remains unfazed.
“On several occasions, I have been threatened. May be some day I will get killed. But I will continue my fight to save orangutans and rainforests till I die,” he said.
(Pradipta Tapadar can be contacted at pradipta.t@ians.in)
- 'Green fuels' cause more harm to the environment than fossil fuels - Mar 01, 2010
- Palm-oil plan may save the world's last orangutans - Jul 23, 2009
- Habitat loss drives Sumatran tiger to verge of extinction - Feb 29, 2012
- New orangutan population discovered in Indonesia - Apr 13, 2009
- Unilever cuts ties with key palm oil supplier to India - Dec 11, 2009
- Indonesian orangutans, tigers and elephants threatened by new logging scheme - Jun 10, 2009
- Now dogs to the rescue of Kaziranga rhinos - Jan 22, 2012
- Oil palm on peatlands trigger greenhouse gas: Study - Apr 27, 2012
- Alert officials foil rhino poaching in Assam - Jan 23, 2012
- Tigers in Bhutan:'significant discovery' for survival - Sep 20, 2010
- Oil palm plantations are no substitute for tropical rainforests - Sep 16, 2008
- New TV footage shows tigers can thrive and breed in Himalayas - Sep 20, 2010
- South African game park officials arrested for rhino poaching - Mar 01, 2012
- Orangutan under threat of extinction in Indonesia - Sep 06, 2008
- Eco-wildlife film fest opens in Delhi - Feb 14, 2011
Tags: baby orangutan, destruction of rainforests, ecological balance, emotional journey, extinction of species, french filmmaker, golden panda, greenhouse gases, killing spree, minute documentary film, orangutans, palm oil plantations, pulp industry, rapid destruction, resource exploitation, southeast asian region, sumatran tigers, thriving business, wildlife film, wildlife filmmaker