FERRERO FAILS
...AND THEY’RE NOT ALONE
Corporations and their long-reaching supply chains, together with the banks providing the capital, are driving deforestation, violating land rights and other human rights and further destabilizing our climate to turn the quickest profit. The current zoonotic pandemic has exacerbated global racial and economic inequity and only escalated risks to Indigenous and local communities.
Brands and banks must take real action to prevent further human rights violations and deforestation. We call on them to Keep Forests Standing and Uphold Indigenous Peoples Rights now.
- Adopt No Deforestation, No Peatland and No Exploitation (NDPE) Policies
- Release Forest Footprint
- Prevent Violence and Uphold Human Rights
- Hold Bad Actors to Account
- Prove Compliance by Business Partners
Keep Forests Standing
Evaluating the Brands and Banks Driving
Deforestation and Human Rights Abuses
How They
Measured Up
Updates
Global Consumer Brands Continue to Fall Short on Deforestation and Human Rights
Our 2025 Keep Forests Standing Scorecard shows that corporate action on deforestation and human rights remains slow.
Read MoreThe maker of Oreos is not taking its human rights responsibilities seriously
Rising authoritarianism is eroding basic democratic principles and human rights around the world, and corporations aren't doing enough about it.
Read MoreGlobal Consumer Brands Lag on Deforestation, Human Rights Protections in 2024 Keep Forests Standing Scorecard
Global consumer goods companies remain critical drivers of deforestation and human rights violations in supply chains, particularly in producing forest-risk commodities like palm oil, soy, and paper used in packaging.
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