Meeting the inspiring Lone Droscher Nielson
19 Nov 2009 4 Comments
in Saving the orangutan Tags: Borneo, orangutans, palm oil
It is always a privilege to meet someone who inspires you and I had that rare opportunity last night at Woburn Safari Park. They held “An Evening with Lone Droscher Nielson”, and I was first on the list for a ticket –
in fact, I was pre-list as I have contacts at the Park. It was scheduled to be an hour’s talk, but it was nearer two and everyo
ne sat spellbound. I thoroughly enjoyed every moment, Lone spent time talking to everyone who wanted to talk and signed books. As usual, I became a bit tongue-tied when faced with someone I admire so much, but I hope I made a little bit of sense!
For anyone who doesn’t know, Lone is the founder and public face of the Nyaru Menteng Rescue & Rehabilitation Centre. She began her work 10years ago with the dream of helping the hundred or so orangutans who were in need of immediate help. The centre has gone from strength to strength but the demand for space in the nursery, forest schools and islands has grown beyond imagining. Currently there are 600 orangutans in their care and one day the majority will be released back into the wild into specially found release sites.
Despite all the great work Lone has done and all the things she has achieved, she doesn’t feel successful – she told us that her dream hadn’t come true. She has not been able to release all the orangutans and solve all the problems they face in Indonesia. Her great wish is that there was no longer any need for centres such as hers and that all the orangutans were safe and in the wild. Lone is a humble lady, not only does she feel that she hasn’t achieved what she set out to do yet, but she was clear to reiterate that what she does in Borneo could not be done without her committed staff, many of which are local people passionate in the cause.
Lone has so many stories to tell about her experiences, but there was one story that will remain with me forever. Alma was an orangutan that came to the centre after living with a gold-miner. Unfortunately Alma had discovered one of the small bottles of mercury used in the process and had drunk it. At Nyaru Menteng they did everything they could for her, even sending her blood to the States and getting special medication that would bind the mercury together. Nothing, however, stopped it from getting to her brain. Alma was a very sick little orangutan and had to spend a lot of time on IVs in the infirmary. When she was fit enough she spent time in Lone’s house. She was one of the gentlest and calmest orangutans Lone has ever come across,she would play for hours in the kitchen cupboards taking out each pot and putting it on the floor. Whenever she came across a can of food she would take it through to the living room and hand it to Lone who would pretend to open it but not be able to. One day Alma brought in a can opener instead and Lone had no option but to show her what it did by opening a can of beans. Two weeks later after a further spell in hospital, Alma came back to Lone’s house and carried a can through to the living room. When Lone showed her she couldn’t open it, Alma went back into the kitchen and found the can opener! A while after this Lone went to visit her in the hospital and found her to be much more anxious and agitated than normal, trying to rip out her IV. Eventually Lone decided to take her out into the forest which she enjoyed doing when she was well enough. They spent a long time playing in the water which always made Alma laugh. Afterwards they went for a walk further into the forest where they sat down for a chat. Just as Lone decided it was time to go back Alma climbed up into her lap and slowly went to sleep. She never woke up. At some level, this beautiful orangutan must have known what was going to happen and had decided how she wanted to spend her time. She hadn’t made a fuss to get out of the hospital until the person she saw as her best friend arrived and then she decided that’s who she wanted to spend time with. I can say there were quite a few people in the room wiping their eyes at the end of this story – including me!
Lone went on to explain about the palm oil problem. Until about 2003, Lone and her team were making some progress with the logging companies and things were starting to look up for the orangutan. Then palm oil exploded
onto the scene and the problem intensified. Logging did not mean great amounts of forests being completely felled – some trees remained standing and the forests had chance to regenerate. Orangutans could live in these forests and the new trees fruited better than older ones. A balance could be found. Palm oil plantations, however, decimate the landscape. Rainforest the size of 300 football pitches are lost every hour and are replaced by the monoculture of oil palms. This is not just devastating news for the orangutan, but all wildlife. Between 80-100% of wildlife is lost when palm oil moves in and never returns to the plantations. This is a shocking figure, particularly when palm oil is heralded as a “green oil”, that will one day soon start filling our cars as biofuel.
Sadly, with palm oil being in at least 1 in 10 supermarket products, there is no way even an active boycotter could avoid palm oil completely. There are however, solutions. Some palm oil that is being produced is done so sustainably. Many companies claim that there just isn’t a large enough supply and that it would cost too much for the consumer. Currently there is 2 million tonnes of sustainable palm oil being stored in Hull and Rotterdam – only 19% has been brought. In addition to this a recent BBC programme Britain’s Really Disgusting Food (available to watch on iplayer) investigated how much it would cost the consumer if manufacturers began using sustainable palm oil. The resulting increase would be 0.5p on a Mars Bar. I’m sure that the manufactures could cope with swallowing that cost themselves whilst using it as a great PR move, but even if they weren’t prepared to, 0.5p on a bar of chocolate is not going to stop people from buying it.
Despite all the problems Lone, her team and the orangutans are facing, there is still hope for the species and certainly for the rescued and rehabilitated orangutans of Nyaru Menteng. In March they plan to release 100 orangutans which involves plane and helicopter flights, several staff to carry the orangutans, radio monitoring equipment and so on. There is so much work to be done in order to release even one orangutan, including finding the appropriate sites and working with logging and mining companies as well as the government. Each release will cost approximately £3000 so they urgently need our help. If you would like to learn more about the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation or donate to their work, please visit www.savetheorangutan.co.uk
The impact of Palm Oil
04 Oct 2009 Leave a Comment
If you’re interested in conservation and green issues, palm oil is a major problem.
25 hectares of rainforest is destroyed every minute. Most, of this is to make way for new palm oil planations. Palm oil is easy and quick to grow, and as such is a popular ingredient in everyday items from chocolate, to margarine, to biofuel to cosmetics. It’s every where. Unfortunately it needs a certain climate to grow – one of the best areas is Indonesia.
This massive deforestation of Borneo and Sumatra is having devastating effects on the orangutan, who only live in the wild on these 2 islands. This solitary creature is being forced into smaller and smaller pockets of rainforest as the remainder is felled around them. Sadly, they are often seen as pests by the owners of the plantations and are killed any time they come too close.
This so called ‘green oil’ is ironically harmful to the environment. The emissions from tropical deforestation make up 17% of annual greenhouse gas emissions, that’s more than the world’s transport sector!

Natural rainforests can absorb 150-400 tonnes of carbon per hectare. Palm oil plantations on the other hand can only manage 40-50 tonnes.
Not only are trees being cut down, but large areas of peatland is being cleared for palm oil plantations. Peatlands are prime storage units for carbon – clearing these releases huge amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere – the very thing we’re being encouraged to prevent by reducing our personal carbon footprints.
Companies do not need to state the type of palm oil used in its products, they can easily hide it under ‘vegetable oil’ and they certainly don’t need to declare the source of their palm oil. Several large companies are members of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) and aim to be using sustainable palm oil by 2015. Sadly, this might be too late. Experts predict that orangutans might be extinct in the wild within 10 years.
It is important that if companies continue to use palm oil, then it is clearly labelled in their ingredients. This will then at least give us the choice and help save the orangutan.

01 Sep 2009 Leave a Comment
in Saving the orangutan Tags: Borneo, orangutan, palm oil
People who know me, read my tweets or see my Facebook page will, no doubt, soon have heard the story of orangutans and palm oil a hundred times. Yes, I admit, I do keep going on about the issues but they’re issues that have touched my heart and got under my skin and I’m not going to apologise for that.
I also love photography, when I get a moment, I am a huge football fan and I like baking. Each of my pages will record these passions and the progress (or not) that I make.
