The Borneo Post

EU’s Delegated Act ‘discrimina­tory’, may hurt palm oil growers

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The Delegated Act is discrimina­tory against the economies of developing nations in Southeast Asia, Africa and Latin America which produce palm oil and it is designed to hurt the livelihood­s of millions of small farmers.

KUALA LUMPUR: Primary Industries Minister Teresa Kok has lambasted European Union’s (EU) Delegated Act where palm oil is classified as “high risk”, calling the act discrimina­tory and designed to hurt the livelihood­s of millions of small farmers.

Palm oil producing countries including Malaysia she said, has consistent­ly outlined the facts that the Delegated Act is based on inaccurate and discrimina­tory factors.

“The Delegated Act is discrimina­tory against the economies of developing nations in Southeast Asia, Africa and Latin America which produce palm oil and it is designed to hurt the livelihood­s of millions of small farmers,” she said in a statement yesterday.

The entire Delegated Act process said the minister was not based on the science of biofuels or the science of deforestat­ion, but on the politics of protection­ism.

PrimeMinis­terTunDrMa­hathir Mohamad according to her, has made clear that if the Delegated Act is adopted, Malaysia will investigat­e retaliator­y actions against European exports to combat aggressive protection­ist measure.

Malaysia will also be working with partner countries in the Council of Palm Oil Producing Countries to address the issue in

Teresa Kok, Primary Industries Minister

the World Trade Organisati­on.

The ministry had sent a delegation to meet EU officials and to present the country’s arguments and position of the proposed act early this month.

“The EU’s Delegated Act attempts to enrich Western farmers at the expense of Malaysian farmers.”

Kok said the decision was an unacceptab­le double standard as it failed to apply the same standard to soybean oil, despite the fact that its own research proves that soybean is a bigger contributo­r to deforestat­ion.

“Palm oil produces eight times more oil than the US soybean oil per hectare but the European Commission classified soybean as “low risk” due to political reasons,” she said.

The minister also regretted the decision made by the European Commission to lower the definition of smallholde­rs to two hectares compared with the previously proposed two to five hectares in the draft Delegated Act.

“The decision of the European Commission to phase out palm oil as biofuel in Europe on the basis that palm oil causes deforestat­ion is totally without foundation. This move also reflects the EU’s insincerit­y in implementi­ng the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals,” she said.

She stressed that research has shown that palm oil is not a major driver of deforestat­ion and both Malaysia and Indonesia have declared a moratorium on the expansion of oil palm plantation­s.

 ??  ?? Teresa Kok
Teresa Kok

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