The Borneo Post

Ministry targets 10 per cent increase in local palm oil use

-

KUALA LUMPUR: The Primary Industries Ministry targets a 10 per cent increase in the use of palm oil and its products through the ‘Sayangi Sawitku’ campaign.

Its minister Teresa Kok Suh Sim said local use of palm oil products currently stood at 20 per cent while about 80 per cent was for export markets.

“We urge manufactur­ers of all downstream palm oil products to placed the ‘Sayangi Sawitku’ campaign label on their products to educate the consumers that (the products) are made of palm oil,” she said during a questions and answers session with companies under the Cooking Oil Stabilisat­ion Scheme (COSS) here, yesterday.

Earlier in her speech, Kok said since the pre- launch of national level ‘Sayangi Sawitku’ campaign, various activities and

We urge manufactur­ers of all downstream palm oil products to placed the ‘Sayangi Sawitku’ campaign label on their products to educate the consumers that (the products) are made of palm oil. Teresa Kok Suh Sim, Primary Industries Ministry

programmes had been carried out with local people, students from the different schools, colleges and universiti­es.

“The objective of this campaign is to cultivate the spirit of love and pride towards Malaysian palm oil as well as the appreciati­ons of the commodity’s contributi­on towards the economy,” she added.

Kok said the mandatory implementa­tion of SCCS- Supply Chain Certificat­ion Standard for palm oil processing facilities involved with COSS was June 30, 2019.

“For palm oil processing facilities which are not involved with COSS, they need to get the SCCS certificat­ion before December 31, 2019,” she said.

Meanwhile, the Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Minister Datuk Seri Saifuddin Nasution Ismail said the government had allocated RM600 million this year to subsidise cooking oil.

“The allocation involved 60,000 metric tonnes or 3.69 per cent of the subsidise cooking oil, involving 280 cooking oil packagers under the COSS scheme nationwide.”

“The government will give them 60 sen subsidy for every one kilogramme of RM2.50 cooking oil packet,” she said.

 ?? — Bernama photo ?? Kok speaks at a COSS event. According to Kok, local use of palm oil products currently stood at 20 per cent while about 80 per cent was for export markets.
— Bernama photo Kok speaks at a COSS event. According to Kok, local use of palm oil products currently stood at 20 per cent while about 80 per cent was for export markets.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia