Puma Future Cat Court Decision Sh Cheap Puma Ferra

 
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Dołączył: 21 Mar 2011
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PostWysłany: Pon 16:43, 21 Mar 2011    Temat postu: Puma Future Cat Court Decision Sh Cheap Puma Ferra

Independent has had a tumultuous past few weeks. Exposed in late April 2009 as a newspaper with plunging circulation and with its parent company, The Independent News and Media in dire danger of defaulting on a 200 Million Euro bond, the newspaper Cheap Puma Ferrari, interestingly, launched a broadside against palm oil on Mayday 2009.
Rolling out the now boring mantra of palm oil causing massive deforestation, threatening the extinction of the orang utan and displacing native people, the paper published a series of "reports" trundling out these well worn equivocations and half-truths as the gospel truth!
Unfortunately for The Independent, it made an extraordinary Freudian slip as to the real motive behind its "report" when it pointed out that "all this comes amid a surge in demand for the world's cheapest cooking oil!"
Enough evidence has been proffered by this site as to the veracity of the "report", in particular the allegations of deforestation and impending orang utan extinction which have both been exposed as patently untrue.
For one, palm oil is clearly far and away, the most sustainable of oilseed crops. Blessed with exceptional productivity, palm oil enjoys an enviable yield of 4.5 metric tons per hectare planted which dwarfs its nearest competitors, such as soy, canola and sunflower which typical has a yield of 0.5 metric tons per hectare. Even the uninitiated can surmise that this means that palm oil requires far LESS land than its competitors to produce the same unit of edible oil.
This explains why Malaysia, which was erstwhile, the largest producer of palm oil Cheap Puma First Round, has cultivated the crop for more than a hundred years and STILL can boast forest cover exceeding 55% (the UK where The Independent is based, pales by comparison in its permanent forest cover which currently stands at less than 11%)!
Moreover, oil palm cultivation in Malaysia represents only 0.09% of the world agricultural area. In the view of Deforestation Watch, surely such allegations of deforestation and climate change caused by palm oil ring hollow when critics such as The Independent conveniently remains silent on the 99.91% cultivated land in the rest of the world. The question has to be asked whether this is due to the fact that most of these 99.91% agricultural land resides in the developed economies from which these critics hail?
The allegation of palm oil endangering the orang utan to the extent of threatening their extinction certainly takes credulity to a new low. For The Independent to allege that the orang utan could become extinct in less than 10 years smacks OF RECKLESS JOURNALISM. It raises the question whether The Independent has done any fact checking as the orang utan population in the wild in Borneo is currently estimated at between 45,000 and 69 Puma Future Cat,000, it behooves one to ask just how is it even remotely possible for the orang utan, by any leap of logic to be facing extinction. Rather than dwindling, there is evidence that the orang utan population in the wild is actually growing! The recent discovery of more than 2,000 wild orang utans by scientists in Indonesian Borneo has left many environmentalists red faced, especially RAN which had predicted that the orang utan would go extinct by 2011 (in 2 year's time). The new find could well add 5 percent to the world's known orangutan numbers, said Erik Meijaard, senior ecologist for the Nature Conservancy in Indonesia.
Orang Utan conservation efforts have been initiated for some years now with many conservation programs and orang utan enclaves established by Malaysia and Indonesia. Orang utan conservation centres had been established in Indonesia including those at Tanjung Puting National Park in Central Kalimantan, Kutai in East Kalimantan, Gunung Palung National Park in West Kalimantan, and Bukit Lawang in the Gunung Leuser National Park on the border of Aceh and North Sumatra. In Malaysia, conservation areas have been set up and they include the Semenggoh Wildlife Centre in Sarawak and


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