Would you throw away your Television after using it once?

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andreac1

Greenpeace and  Kimberly-Clark have announced the successful resolution of the Kleercut campaign as the maker of Kleenex has established a new sustainability policy focused on protecting Endangered Forests. Go to www.greenpeace.org/kleercut to find out more!

Never!
 

Over and over again, we write about the forest destruction caused by tissue-giant Kimberly-Clark.  To make products like Kleenex, Scott, and Viva, Kimberly-Clark destroys pristine, thousand year old ecosystems.  Its products are used once and then thrown away, but leave a lasting mark on the landscape and displace migratory birds, caribou, wolverines, and other critical species.

It would never seem appropriate to use something like a television set once and then throw it away, yet companies like Kimberly-Clark continue to do just this to our ancient forests when they pulp them for Kleenex.

This was the message delivered across the country when Greenpeace volunteers filled trashcans with objects we would never use once and throw away to make the point that we should not use our ancient forests once and throw them away as Kleenex.  Garbage cans were filled with products like skateboards, bikes, toasters, and televisions to show the absurdity and wastefulness of throwing using products once!

 

In Chicago, locals, superheros (youngsters dressed as Superman) gathered with “Treemo,” Chicago's loveable, huggable humanoid tree, in Millenium Park to spread the word about the importance of incorporating recycled fiber into tissue products.  

In Monterey, California, and Austin, Texas, garbage cans held products like bikes, golf clubs, guitars, snowboards, and electronics.  In Los Angeles, California, Greenpeace volunteers spread the word about forest destruction caused by our disposable products to the passers on the Walk of Stars in Hollywood!

 

In Portland, at the local Whole Foods, Greenpeace volunteers chatted with shoppers about the importance of making tissues from paper instead of from trees. Several of the brands on the Greenpeace Recycled Tissue and Toilet Paper Guide were available at the store for folks to try or continue to buy.

Even in the heat at high noon, our fearless volunteers, their “trees,” superheros, and garbage cans spread the word of the importance of using tissue products that contain recycled content and post-consumer recycled content and made without harmful whitening chemicals.

Earth School Kids Say No to Kleenex!

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andreac1

Greenpeace and  Kimberly-Clark have announced the successful resolution of the Kleercut campaign as the maker of Kleenex has established a new sustainability policy focused on protecting Endangered Forests. Go to www.greenpeace.org/kleercut to find out more!

Kleenex Free Earth School!


Earth School, located at the Hilltop Hanover Farm Children’s Environmental Education Center in upstate New York, offers a place for children to run, play, and learn lessons in sustainability. Barbara Sarbin founded the Earth School and the non-profit that operates the school, Something Good in the World, to give both public schooled and home schooled students a place to attend environmentally-themed educational programs.

In this video, the students at Earth School excitedly share their school adventures and commitment to protecting the environment. Because of this commitment, they have stopped using Kleenex tissues at their school, replacing them with recycled alternatives.


The students first learned about the Kleenex Free Schools campaign through their teacher, Barbara. The class did their own research on the destruction of old growth forests caused by tissue-giant Kimberly-Clark, maker of tissue products like Kleenex, and decided to rid their school of these destructive products.

Kimberly-Clark uses wood fiber from ancient forests, which are essential in fighting climate change and providing home to wildlife like caribou, wolves, eagles and bears, to make its disposable paper products. The Boreal forest is being flushed down the toilet because Kimberly-Clark refuses to improve its logging practices and incorporate recycled fiber into is products. If you want to get Kleenex out of your home, office, or school, check out the new Greenpeace Recycled Tissue and Toilet Paper guide—a listing of forest-friendly products that use recycled content and do not destroy ancient forests. (Major media recently picked up the guide and Kimberly-Clark's practices, including The New York Times, The Guardian, and Fast Company.)

After seeing this video, I was so inspired I called the students of the Earth School to thank them for their efforts to make the world a greener place. Their enthusiasm was inspiring. Robert (8) was “upset” when he learned trees were cut “down to put into Kleenex boxes.” Jared (9) echoed that sentiment, saying this practice is unfair and he would be “mad if [he] were an old growth tree going into a tissue box.” The students said they used alternative tissue brands because they contain recycled content.

Jared also told about the “Pedal-a-Watt,” an electricity-generating bike the students ride to charge a battery that operates a heater, which melts ice when it forms in the chicken coop’s watering trough. One minute of riding equals one minute of electricity. According to Maeve (10), the chicken coop has a green roof, “a bunch of plants that do not need water, keeps the coop cool in the summer, and warm in the winter.”

Nicholas (8) and Anya (9) explained that their “compost lasagna” is layers of waste from the kitchen, newspaper, leaves, and manure (also known as sheet mulch). Nicholas added that the compost pile is “a buffet for the worms,” which aid in speeding up the decaying process. The garden receives the benefits of the compost pile and is watered from the catchment of the rain barrel. The rain barrel, says Luke (8), is “attached to a drip irrigation hose.” The garden is also watered from a pond pump, which, Jared explains, is powered by the seesaw the students ride. A solar panel is also used to generate power to run a fountain, which helps keep the pond water moving and algae growth at bay.  

The plants in the garden are xeriscaped. That means, as Jeremy (9) describes it, that the garden consists of “local plants that do not need a lot of water, are not invasive, and the deer do not eat.” Also, Sophia (9) noted, their Three Sisters Garden, containing corn, squash, and green and purple beans, is similar to those of the Native Americans. The three plants work together, Nicholas added: the corn grows straight up, the beans grow up on the corn, and the squash grow along the ground under the other two.

Earth School shows us in their video and explains to us how to be sustainable, inventive, and Kleenex-free!

Until the Forests are protected,

Andrea

Ashley Perry is a Kleercut Activist!

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andreac1

Ashley Perry is a 12-year-old at Friedman Middle School in Taunton, Massachusetts, who has taken to activism and campaigning at an early age. 

As we all know, Kimberly-Clark destroys ancient forests to make tissue-products like Kleenex and Scott tissues.  Ashley is running her own Kleercut campaign!


First, she implemented a Perry-family boycott of Kimberly-Clark products.  Ashley had read about Greenpeace’s Kleercut campaign on our website, took action, and she was able to persuade her family to follow her lead.  

Ashley has taken her campaign on the road as well; she refuses to use Kleenex at her friends’ houses!  She has distributed fliers that talk about switching to a more environmentally friendly tissue brand in her neighbors’ mailboxes and handed them out to spectators at the local baseball field about.

At her school, Ashley is a member of the Blue Crew, a group of students who go around twice a week to the classrooms to pick up paper for recycling.  In addition to her Kleenex-boycott work, Ashley has, along with her mom’s help, started a recycling program—the Ashley Perry Project—at the local baseball field.  Every week Ashley and her mom go retrieve the recyclables and bring them home to put in their own bins.  Recently Ashley wrote a letter to her school asking them to place recycling bins in the cafeteria for paper and plastic products.  Ashley says the response from her classmates and community members has been positive.  “They have been pretty good about recycling and putting it in the right bins,” she says.

Thanks to Ashley for taking the initiative, doing the research and making positive change!  It will take all of us to protect the ancient forests!

Keep up the great work, Ashley!


Andrea

Kimberly-Clark found guilty of greenwashing by Ethical Corporation

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andreac1 Ethical Corporation’s “Greenwasher,” is a monthly column dedicated to pointing out inaccuracies in the seemingly environmental practices / actions of companies and corporations, has chosen to highlight tissue-giant Kimberly-Clark, makers of products such as Kleenex, Scott, Huggies, Kotex, and Depends, for the second time this year.

According to their website, Kimberly-Clark (K-C) “emphasizes sustainability and sound environmental practices as cornerstones of doing business…”  The irony lies in that K-C’s recycled tissue boxes hold tissues that are not recycled.  How could they let this happen?  How can the box that holds their tissue be the only part of the product that is recycled?

To further add to the greenwasher theme, K-C has released a sustainability report that states the wood fiber K-C receives from the Boreal Forest in Ontario, Canada, is “sawdust and chips – or leftovers.”  

There are two reasons that the above statement is ironic and a false environmental-advertisement.  First, the Kenogami Forest in northern Ontario has been completely destroyed and habitat has been lost due to K-C’s more than 70-year occupation.  Really, there is nothing “leftover” for K-C to log in the Kenogami.

In addition, a woodpile—enough to fill 7000 truckloads—was recently found in northern Ontario in the Ogoki forest, northwest of the Kenogami Forest.  These logs—rotting in the forest—were earmarked for a mill whose largest customer is Kimberly-Clark.  This is a direct consequence of poor forest management.  Is this the “leftovers” K-C describes in their sustainability report?

Tell Kimberly-Clark to stop talking about “sustainability practices” and actually put them into action.
 

Until the ancient forests are protected,

Andrea


Activists send message to Kimberly-Clark employees in Roswell, Georgia

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andreac1 Greenpeace and  Kimberly-Clark have announced the successful resolution of the Kleercut campaign as the maker of Kleenex has established a new sustainability policy focused on protecting Endangered Forests. Go to www.greenpeace.org/kleercut to find out more!

Yesterday at the Kimberly-Clark (K-C) facility in Roswell, GA, several Greenpeace activists met the employee lunch crowd with a message of sustainability. The grounds of this facility, the largest of K-C’s office complexes, are picturesque, pristinely manicured, complete with a centrally located pond and jogging track. It was gorgeously landscaped (in fact, we even saw the care-crew) with flowers, shrubs, and, yes, trees. Lots of trees. Big, beautiful, arching canopies cast leafy shade upon the campus nestled in the northern Atlanta suburbs. Yes, it is ironic that the world’s largest producer of Kleenex tissues, with a known history of unsustainable logging practices, has a campus so populated with trees.

And it also seems ironic that time and time again, Greenpeace has to reiterate to K-C the importance of using wood that has been sustainability logged and incorporating recycled fiber into their products. Obviously, they see and appreciate the beauty of nature. They understand that their employees value a work environment connected to the natural world. Yet they are not willing to put this practice into their tissue making.  

So, using the landscape to our advantage, a crew of Greenpeace activists deployed a boat into the pond at this Georgia facility. The teamwork was seamless; the boat was floating in the pond in mere minutes. Three activists, Nate Stellhorn (Austin Frontline), Suzahn Ebrahimian (DC Frontline), and Sheila Hanley (Austin, former GOT, former Frontline) paddled to the center of the pond and deployed three banners while reading aloud, through a bull-horn, the case study Greenpeace put out of K-C's mismanagement of the Kenogami Forest. Called Cut & Run, the case study exposes Kimberly-Clark’s 70-year history of sourcing fiber from the Kenogami Forest in Ontario, Canada, and tells the story of horrific forest degradation, social injustice towards indigenous tribes, and field reports of decreasing wolverine, caribou, and eagle populations — all the result of K-C producing their disposable products.

While the boat was deployed, several members of the team distributed fliers onto the cars of K-C execs. The fliers stated that producing tissues out of a limited resource is no longer acceptable or sustainable when products can be made containing recycled content. The fliers also invited K-C employees to ask their employer to be an environmental leader.

As the security was quite tight, six activists were brought to the Roswell Detention Center, but not before the message was delivered loud and clear, thanks to the bullhorns, that K-C needs to change its ways. The activists were tired and hungry by the time they were released from jail, but nonetheless happy and healthy.

We know deep down, somewhere, Kimberly-Clark cares about the environment. We saw it.

We are not deterred.


Until the ancient forests are protected,
Andrea

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andreac1
San Francisco, CA USA




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