JAKARTA, Aug 27 (Reuters) - Environmentalists on Friday criticised a decision by agribusiness giant Cargill Inc [CARG.UL] to continue buying palm oil from Indonesian firm PT Smart Tbk
Greenpeace has alleged in its reports that SMART -- which is controlled by Indonesia's Widjaja family, owners of the Sinar Mas conglomerate -- cleared forests in Kalimantan without completing the proper paperwork and destroyed carbon-rich peatlands.
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The audit, released earlier this month, said SMART had not cleared primary forests but also showed that it had, in some cases, failed to complete necessary environmental impact statements and had planted on some areas of peatland that were deeper than three metres -- a breach of Indonesian law.
SMART said the incidents of deep peatland planting were small and sporadic, that some peatlands had been repaired and that it had since got all the necessary paperwork for its concessions.
Peatlands release vast amounts of greenhouse gases when disturbed and their preservation is seen as crucial to slowing down climate change.
Cargill said on Friday it was satisfied with the audit.
"Cargill has consistently stated that if the allegations were proven correct and PT SMART did not take corrective action we would delist it as a supplier," it said in an email to Reuters.
"(But) we are encouraged PT SMART has acknowledged areas of non-compliance... (and) that it has committed to taking corrective actions and to strengthening its standard operating procedures to address these," it said.
U.S-based environmentalist group Rainforest Action Network (RAN) on Friday issued a statement condemning Cargill's decision to keep buying from SMART.
"It's now clear that Greenpeace's evidence against PT SMART was justified, and that Sinar Mas remains a controversial supplier," said Ashley Schaeffer of RAN. (Editing by Sara Webb and Alex Richardson)