Trees planted to improve the livelihood of smallholder farmers and for conservation
Cargill announced that it has committed to
planting 150,000 trees in Indonesia across its company sites nationwide over
the next three years. This initiative is in celebration of Earth day and the
company’s 150th year anniversary. Cargill employees celebrated Earth Day 2015
by planting 1,000 treees at Kampong Tunggilis, Ciputri Village, right on the
foot of the Gede Pangrango Montain in the Cianjur Regency, West Java.
Kampong Tunggilis is a rain-water
absorption site that provides water supplies to Cianjur, Jakarta and Bekasi
areas. Protecting water-absorbing forests at Tunggilis is critical for ensuring
sustainable fresh water supplies to the Great Jakarta areas and reducing water
volumes in rivers flowing to the Java Sea, which will help lower the risk of
flood in Jakarta or Bekasi and to prevent soil erosion.
Image: Mr. TinDC |
The three-year’s tree-planting program in
Indonesia started in April 2015 and the second phase of will take place at the
start of rainy season in October 2015. In the first year of the program, we are
expecting 70,000 trees planted across 18 sites of Cargill plants. The same
number of trees will be planted in 2016 while in 2017, a minimum number of
10,000 trees will be planted.
The tree-planting program will support
biodiversity and the tree varieties will be decided by the team on each site.
For example, Cargill team in Amurang, Sulawesi, prefers to implement the
tree-planting program by donating coconut trees to smallholders farmers in
those areas; Cargill Makassar trained and supported the cocoa farmers to make
their own cocoa nursery; Cargill team in South Sumatra chose to donate fruit
trees to the smallholder farmers in the area; Cargill team in Pasuruan, East
Java, prefers to work with a local NGO Kaliandra, to plant trees in the Arjuna
Mountain conservation area in East Java; and Cargill team in the Jakarta Head
Office choose to plant trees at Gede Pangrango Mountain.
Cargill teams in all areas consulted with
local Environment Agency Office to make sure that the conservation objectives
are achieved. Cargill also teams up with NGOs and local communities to nurture
the planted trees to make sure that the trees grow well and provide the
intended benefits.
Cargill has conducted a variety of
corporate social responsibility (CSR) programs in Indonesia to improving the
lives of smallholder farmers while also working to protect this country’s precious
natural resources. CSR programs include providing power, water and Internet
access to more than 10,000 people, and maintains more than 2100 miles of roads;
running underground pipes from ex-SEA Games water treatment plant to surface
tanks installed in the village of Desa Sentosa, South Sumatra, providing more
than 3000 underprivileged villagers with access to clean piped water; providing
clean drinking water to hundreds of families in Pandaan, East Java, by funding
deep wells in four different villages; and conducting a tree planting program
for protecting and rehabilitating water resources around Arjuna-Welirang
Mountains, where 12 out of 28 water springs have dried because of the
deforestration.
Visit the Cargill website HERE.
The Global Miller
This blog is maintained by The Global Miller staff and is supported by the magazine GFMT
which is published by Perendale Publishers Limited.
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