Permalink: https://photo.greenpeace.org/archive/Nestle-KitKat-Product-Shot-27MZIFLMWS5G.htmlConceptually similarNestlé KitKat Product ShotGP0201GCompleted★★★★Nestlé KitKat Product ShotGP0201HCompleted★★★★Nestlé KitKat Product ShotGP0201ICompleted★★★★Nestlé KitKat Product ShotGP0201JCompleted★★★★Forest Action at Nestlé HQ in JakartaGP0206XCompleted★★★★★★Forest Action at Nestlé HQ in JakartaGP0206YCompleted★★★★★★Forest Action at Nestlé HQ in LondonGP02029Completed★★★★★★★Forest Action at Nestlé HQ in LondonGP0202ACompleted★★★★★★Forest Action at Nestlé HQ in LondonGP0202BCompleted★★★★★★View AllGP0201KNestlé KitKat Product ShotKitKat, a chocolate bar produced by Nestlé, with an imitation orangutan finger. Nestle' is using palm oil from destroyed Indonesian rainforests and peatlands, in products like KitKat, pushing already endangered orangutans to the brink of extinction and accelerating climate change.Locations:Europe-London-United KingdomDate:3 Mar, 2010Credit:© Greenpeace / John NovisMaximum size:5616px X 3744pxKeywords:Climate (campaign title)-Deforestation-Forests (campaign title)-KitKat-KWCI (GPI)-Nestlé S.A.-Orangutans-Palm oil (product)-Products-SweetsShoot:Nestlé KitKat Product ShotsFoods company Nestlé is using palm oil from destroyed Indonesian rainforests and peatlands, in products like KitKat, pushing already endangered orangutans to the brink of extinction and accelerating climate change. The chocolate bar with an imitation orangutan finger also appears in Greenpeace's "Having a Break?" video, featuring a bored office worker taking a break to enjoy a KitKat, but instead bites into an orangutan’s finger: www.greenpeace.org/kitkatRelated Collections:Caught Red Handed (All Photographers)