The Borneo Post

EU decision to ban palm oil for biofuels smacks of discrimina­tion — Soppoa

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KUCHING: Recent European Union ( EU) decisions to ban palm oil for biofuels by 2020 in Europe smack of discrimina­tion as well as asserting colonial mentality on mainly Asian farmers and nations like Indonesia and Malaysia.

The real reason to ban palm oil is because it competes directly with rapeseed grown in EU countries while imposing sustainabi­lity values on the planting of oil palm from a purely colonial styled mentality – do as we say, not what we do, said Sarawak Oil Palm Plantation Owners Associatio­n (Soppoa) in a press statement.

Federal Land Developmen­t Authority ( Felda) had termed EU’s decision to ban palm oil for biofuel as “economic colonisati­on” by citing deforestat­ion as the main reason for the ban which it said “is absolute hogwash”.

It said Europe has no natural forest left today and they are planting pine forests for timber but telling oil palm planting nations to stop deforestat­ion.

“It’s a case of you cannot cut forest for economic developmen­t and wellbeing of the people but Europeans can do what they like, including cutting forest for profit,” continued the press statement.

It further said, as stated in the EU report on forestry (Agricultur­e, forestry and fishery statistics 2018 edition - Eurostat), 21.6 per cent of EU’s roundwood is used for fuelwood ( 2016) and more than 500,000 people are involved in the logging, forestry sector in EU (2015).

“What these tell us is that EU nations can harvest their forest resources for industrial production and employment to people but deny Asian nations from cutting forest for developmen­t purposes.

“Previously, these European colonists have reaped the natural resources of countless nations in Asia and today are one of the biggest consumers of products originatin­g from these plundered nations.”

However, the press statement pointed out, now that they no longer are colonial powers, they resort to sly ways to dictate terms and conditions to their former colonists with the main aim of protecting their own farmers.

Rapeseed and sunflower oils are the main components for European biofuel subsidies which are mainly grown in Europe and are annual crops (which need replanting each year) and highly uncompetit­ive to palm oil in terms of productivi­ty and versatilit­y of use.

These critics of palm oil should petition the EU to show example by planting forest to replace oil seeds production there and also stop logging activities to prove that they are sincere about conservati­on of forest, it said.

It added that another method used by EU to ban palm oil is to impose sustainabi­lity criteria purely on terms and conditions of their own setting.

“These include definition­s of forests, practices and policies on importatio­n of vegetative oils for the European market. Livestock farming (including dairy farms commonly found in EU nations) are the main contributo­rs for deforestat­ion as global breakdown shows agricultur­e land use is only 23 per cent while livestock is 71 per cent; oil palm only occupies 0.04 per cent of agricultur­e land.

“In fact, the FAO ( UN Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on) has stated that Malaysia’s forest cover is over 60 per cent and if tree crops like oil palm, rubber and coconut are included, the coverage is over 80 per cent!,” added the press statement.

Clearly, it said further, these facts cannot be discarded by EU in its declaratio­n of forest cover just to protect its own farmers; it’s about time EU stop dictating terms and conditions like colonial masters on palm oil producing nations.

“A more win-win approach is the way forward by having twoway negotiatio­ns that will benefit everyone and more importantl­y, to the world as palm oil is now being sustainabl­y produced and marketed,” it said.

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