The Borneo Post

Govt has no intention to suspend MSPO implementa­tion — Kok

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SANDAKAN: The government has no intention of suspending the implementa­tion of the Malaysian Sustainabl­e Palm Oil ( MSPO) certificat­ion scheme, Primary Industries Minister Teresa Kok said.

She said the MSPO certificat­ion is necessary to ensure that palm oil is recognised as a sustainabl­e and five-star commodity.

“That’s why we want to continue with the MSPO certificat­ion seriously. Otherwise, it will be difficult for us to market palm oil in the future, especially when European Union ( EU) countries impose various obstacles to the entry of palm oil into their markets,” she said yesterday.

Kok was speaking to reporters after visiting smallholde­r Chong Yun Loi, 52, whose two-hectare oil palm smallholdi­ng that he cultivated since 2006, received the MSPO certificat­ion last week.

The minister was asked to comment on the call made by many oil palm smallholde­rs for the government to postpone the MSPO certificat­ion implementa­tion until the market improves, as they were facing difficulty in abiding by the conditions.

Kok said the government provides an audit cost of RM135 per hectare of oil palm smallholdi­ng to facilitate smallholde­rs in applying for the MSPO certificat­ion.

Malaysian Palm Oil Certificat­ion Council chief executive officer Chew Jit Seng said there are about 650,000 smallholde­rs nationwide who are cultivatin­g 38 per cent of the total 5.85 million hectares of areas under oil palm.

The government has made it mandatory for all oil palm planters and smallholde­rs in the country to obtain the MSPO certificat­ion, which outlines best agricultur­al practices to make the country’s palm oil an internatio­nal choice, by Dec 31.

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