Dear Friends of the rain forest,
The Austrian industrial plant builder Andritz (http://www.andritz.com/ANONIDZ54506A0D3571056B/about-us/about-company-pr...) plans to build one of the world’s largest cellulose factories for the Gunns corporation in Tasmania.
The project endangers about 200,000 hectares of old growth forest. And along with the forest, the unique Tasmanian Devil could disappear forever.
You can join a protest petition at http://www.regenwald.org
The letter to the bosses of the company states:
Dear xxxxxxx,
the participation of Andritz AG in the construction and equipment of the proposed Bell Bay pulp mill in Tasmania worries me greatly.
Old growth temperate rain forest, which has an incredible biodiversity, flourishes on the island. Eighty per cent of its rainforests are already destroyed – much of it by the timber products corporation Gunns, which - as you know - is planning a new pulp mill in the north of the island.
To operate the factory Gunns would require up to four million tonnes of wood each year. That would raze 200,000 hectares of valuable forest and transform the land into monotonous industrial plantations. The forest clearing and operation of the plant would emit about ten million tonnes of greenhouse gases each year, which is more than the annual emissions of a city such as Frankfurt. Every day some 64,000 cubic metres of wastewater are to be discharged into the Tamar River and the sea. The Tasmanian Devil would be face extinction.
Your company writes on sustainability: "The sustainable protection of the environment and the conservation of natural resources are major concerns of the Andritz Group.” This is in stark contrast to participation in the construction of the Gunns pulp mill! Andritz argues that Australia has very high environmental standards and says it cannot judge from afar allegations of forest clearing, the use of napalm, the introduction of large amounts of wastewater and the massive release of greenhouse gases. For me, these are pretexts to avoid having to deal with the consequences of the pulp mill.
So I ask you to cease cooperation with Gunns immediately and not to participate in the construction and equipment of the mill in Tasmania. Moreover, I would consider it scandalous if your participation were backed by Austrian federal export guarantees.
Sincerely,
The Andritz web site indicates they have offices in Victoria and NSW (http://www.andritz.com/ANONIDZ54506A0D3571056B/about-us/about-global-pre...).
The unique Tasmanian Devil, the biggest remaining carnivorous marsupial, could suffer the same fate as the Tasmanian Tiger, which died out in 1936. The Devil is already endangered by a mysterious disease that is increasingly decimating its numbers.
Gunns has already razed large swathes of the island’s old growth forests. Only 20% of the original forests are left. The involvement of Andritz adds to their endangerment. A sticker on a truck reveals a lot about the attitude of the timber industry: “EARTH FIRST - we'll log the other planets later”.
The giant Bell Bay plant would be the third-largest of its kind worldwide. The pristine wilderness with eucalypts up to a thousand years old and 100 metres high is to be replaced by industrial eucalyptus plantations. Activists warn that, as in the past, napalm would be used to destroy forest.
The dispute about the Gunns plant is right at the top of the current Australian environment agenda, with several court actions against it in progress.
Australia’s “Wilderness Society” warns that the operation of the cellulose factory would greatly damage tourism and fisheries. The organisation says the forest razing and the operation of the factory would emit about 10 million tonnes of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere every year; every day some 64,000 cubic metres of effluent water would be discharged into the Tamar River and the sea.
Based in Graz, Andritz sees no reason to stop its involvement. Austrian newspapers quote the company dismissing the statements of environment activists as “laughable and questionable”. The firm cites the long examination of the project. It responded evasively to specific accusations such as clearing with napalm: This couldn’t be assessed from afar. The fact that Andritz aren’t particularly interested in environmental issues is also shown by their activities in Turkey, where they are the only company still involved in the plans for the controversial Ilisu dam in the southeast.
Because razing forests is a loss-making business, Austrian firms involved secure themselves with subsidies and export insurances provided by the government. Environment activists say for the Gunns project Andritz has been guaranteed 500 million euros by the Austrian Control Bank, a specialised institution owned by Austrian commercial banks which helps Austrian industry to compete in the global marketplace.
The bank touts its subscription to the European Union's Eco-Management and Audit Scheme (EMAS) and the United Nations Global Compact for businesses committed to aligning their operations and strategies with human rights, labour, environment and anti-corruption.
“Together with all our employees, working group members and partners we reach to implement our visions of sustainability in collaboration with our stakeholders in a credible and comprehensive manner,” the bank writes on its website.
Comments
Re: Protest to Austrian Gunn paper mill contractor
For heaven's sake, how often must it be said that Tasmanians do not want this industrial monster in our home state! We are well informed about its huge drawbacks and destructive environmental capacity, take our word for it Andritz, and pull out now before you too are targeted.