Peru and cocoa firm in legal spat over Amazon plantations

Photo credit: Environmental Investigation Agency

Peru’s environment ministry has issued a statement to the London stock exchange stating that United Cacao has engaged in illegal deforestation in the Amazon.

The statement is the latest development in an increasingly public legal battle between Peru’s Serfor forest service and the Cayman Islands-listed cocoa firm, United Cacao. Serfor’s move seems aimed at having the company delisted from the London’s exchange.

“The company does not have environmental certification because it did not follow the legally required procedure to begin new large-scale agricultural activities, especially involving the removal of canopy on land designated as forest,” reads the Serfor statement. “We urge [the exchange] to support the Peruvian state’s position as expressed by the DGAAA and Serfor.”

United Cacao raised $9.3 million, about a quarter of its $40 million capital, on the London stock exchange’s alternatives market in December 2014. Complying with the local laws of countries where companies operate is a requirement for companies whose shares trade on the London exchange.

The statement says that United Cacao did not obtain two key permits from environment ministry divisions to clear 17,000 acres of rainforest, including an environmental certification from the DGAAA and an authorization to change the use of the land from the ARFFS. The statement said that the environment ministry requested United Cacao suspend operations in December 2014.

Earlier this month the U.S.-based nonprofit Environment Investigation Agency (EIA) issued a 98-page report about deforestation in Peru’s by United Cacao as well as Grupo Romero palm oil plantations. saying that United Cacao had broken Peruvian law when it cleared land at its Nueva Requena plantation in Ucayali and the Tamshiyacu plantation in Loreto.

“Illegal cultivation of agricultural plantations poses perhaps the greatest new threat to the forests of Peru, as the Peruvian government currently lacks the effective power to enforce laws and regulations, even when illegalities are clearly documented and reported,” EIA’s Peru director Julia Urrunaga told The Guardian.

The Wall Street Journal confirmed that the exchange had opened an investigation into United Cacao’s operations in Peru. However a United Cacao spokesman said that the exchange had not contacted them about the issue.

United Cacao founder Dennis Melka called the EIA “radical NGOs” and “progressive bullies that have an agenda” in an interview with Directors Talk Interviews.

“It’s really incredible that there’s groups out there that have PO Boxes [as their official address] that are issuing press releases, defaming companies like ourselves which are doing hard work, creating jobs, working with the community, developing agriculture in rural areas,” Melka said. “unequivocally we have not broken any rules at all.”

Melka says that the land used to build United Cacao plantations was constitutionally protected freehold land. He emphasizes that the land is not licensed for a period of time, as in licenses for mining and energy projects, but titled in perpetuity. He added that it is zoned for agriculture.

Melka says that land title and legally protected forests are mutually exclusive according to Peruvian law. Therefore, his Peruvian subsidiaries never could have obtained a title to protected forests.

In January Peru’s supreme court upheld a Loreto appeals court decision that United Cacao possessed all necessary permits to realize its current operations.

“A company that uses the courts to contradict the views of the two national authorities on environmental and forestry issues, treating the Judiciary give reason to contradict, shows that it is not acting with the support of the state nor doing what the state requests it to do,” reads the Serfor statement issued today.

United Cacao has spent over $20 million in developing its plantations in Loreto and Ucayali. The land is projected to produce 10,000 tons of cocoa per year by 2021. United Cacao aims to be the world’s top producer of cocoa, according to its website. United Cacao was listed on the Lima stock exchange in September.

Sources

London-Listed Cocoa Company Operating Illegally, Peru Says (Wall Street Journal)

Statement re Press Comment (United Cacao)

COMUNICADO (SERFOR)

Head of London-listed company linked to illegal clearing of Peru rainforest (The Guardian)

United Cacao ingresa listar en la Bolsa de Valores de Lima (El Comercio)

United Cacao Ltd SEZC CEO Dennis Melka puts the record straight (Directors Talk Interviews)

DEFORESTATION BY DEFINITION (Environmental Investigation Agency)

Business Description (United Cacao)

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View Comments (1)

  • IMO, from many years of experience that when profits come before what is the best for the people/nation - profits have the POWER & MONEY to prevail. I hope for Peru & the entire world, this serious situation gets resolved & there are precedents for the future. Illegal/unregulated deforestation can't be allowed to continue.