The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Indonesia certifies a record amount of palm plantation­s as sustainabl­e

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JAKARTA: Indonesia, the world’s largest palm oil producer, has certified a record amount of land under palm oil cultivatio­n as employing environmen­tally sustainabl­e methods, the Indonesia Sustainabl­e Palm Standard (ISPO) Commission said.

The government launched the ISPO in 2011 but has accelerate­d certificat­ion in recent years amid mounting global pressure to address the environmen­tal impacts of producing palm oil.

The ISPO Commission has certified 502 plantation­s since its inception, covering 4.11 million hectares (10.2 million acres) of area, or nearly 30 percent of Indonesia’s estimated 14 million hectares of palm plantation, R Azis Hidayat, the head of the ISPO Commission Secretaria­t, said in a statement on Wednesday.

The certified plantation­s produce 11.57 million tonnes of crude palm oil per year.

The area certified by the ISPO in the past three years were nearly three times the first four years of its operation, Hidayat said.

The ISPO, which is mandatory for large palm companies to join but voluntary for small farmers, is among the Indonesian government’s efforts to make palm produced in a more environmen­tally sustainabl­e manner.

Their standards, however, are considered less strict than the Roundtable on Sustainabl­e Palm Oil (RSPO).

Land cleared for palm cultivatio­n is blamed for releasing large amount of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere since the space is typically made by burning forests, endangerin­g orangutans and Sumatran tigers.

The European Union has classified palm as a crop that causes significan­t deforestat­ion and on its track to phase out palm oil from renewable transporta­tion fuel use, upsetting the government­s of Indonesia and Malaysia, the world’s two largest producers of the edible oil. — Reuters

 ??  ?? An aerial photo of a palm oil plantation in Batanghari, Jambi province, Sumatra island. — Reuters photo
An aerial photo of a palm oil plantation in Batanghari, Jambi province, Sumatra island. — Reuters photo

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