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Article

15 Feb 2023

Author:
Global Canopy (Forest 500)

Report finds that 40% of the companies and financial institutions with the most exposure to tropical deforestation have no policy to end it

"40% of the Forest 500 have yet to set a single policy on deforestation", 15. February 2023

Research by Global Canopy also finds many companies are not monitoring set commitments

Global Canopy’s 9th annual Forest 500 report and ranking finds that the companies and financial institutions with the most influence on deforestation are taking insufficient action on deforestation, with the finance sector “woefully behind”.

Global Canopy’s latest Forest 500 report and ranking, which tracks the policies and performance of the 350 most influential companies and 150 financial institutions most exposed to deforestation risk in their supply chains and investments, has been published.

The latest assessments show very slow progress on deforestation action.

None of the companies and financial institutions in the Forest 500 are deforestation-free, and 40% (201 companies and financial institutions) haven’t set a single policy on deforestation.

Ending deforestation is essential to achieving urgent global goals on climate, nature and human rights. Deforestation impacts global temperatures, emissions, biodiversity, rainfall, displacement of communities and food security. [...]

Many human rights abuses are linked to deforestation, but none of the companies assessed meet the requirements for all human rights commitments alongside their deforestation commitments for all of the commodities to which they are exposed.

The overall picture for financial institutions is worse, where the movement is much too slow for a sector that yields so much power and ability to affect change through its investments.

But only 16 (11%) financial institutions most exposed to deforestation have policies for all four commodities that are assessed.

New best practice guidance calls for companies and financial institutions to eliminate commodity-driven deforestation, conversion, and associated human rights abuses by 2025 at the latest. And meeting this 2025 target is possible. With new due diligence legislation, tools, guidance and data which didn’t exist when these goals were last set. There is no longer any justification for inaction.