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European Parliament approves plan to restrict palm oil use in biofuels

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PETALING JAYA: The European Parliament has approved a plan to seek restrictio­ns on the use of palm oil in biofuels due to concerns about its environmen­tal impact.

The European Union (EU) Parliament has voted in favour of an amendment to a draft law on renewable energy that calls for reducing to zero ‘the contributi­on from biofuels and bioliquids produced from palm oil’ as of 2021, Bloomberg reported.

It added that the assembly’s vote defines its position for talks between national government­s about the draft law on renewables. The final shape of the law will be ironed out in negotiatio­ns between representa­tives of the EU Parliament, member states and the European Commission.

“The Malaysian government views this as unacceptab­le and a protection­ist trade barrier, and a breach of the EU’s WTO commitment­s. We will not hesitate to take corrective action,” Plantation Industries and Commoditie­s Minister Datuk Seri Mah Siew Keong said in a statement.

According to the Malaysian Palm Oil Board, the EU accounted for 12% of Malaysia’s palm oil exports last year, making it the biggest buyer after India. Of the shipments to the EU, the Netherland­s accounts for about half.

On Jan 16, smallholde­rs in Malaysia had gathered in downtown Kuala Lumpur and marched to the EU’s mission to deliver a petition.

While it is major multinatio­nal companies that run plantation­s, the protestors in Malaysia, the world’s second-biggest producer of the commodity, said a ban would devastate rural communitie­s where many small-scale farmers survive by cultivatin­g the crop.

A ban would threaten the livelihood of 650,000 smallholde­rs and over 3.2 million Malaysians who rely on the palm oil industry, said the Malaysian Palm Oil Council.

Palm oil is a major ingredient in products from food to cosmetics. It has long been controvers­ial, as environmen­talists say it drives deforestat­ion, with huge swathes of rainforest logged in recent decades to make way for plantation­s.

The EU is Malaysia’s second-biggest export market for palm oil.

Felda, which has some 112,000 smallholde­rs, harbours the largest population of oil palm smallholde­rs in Malaysia.

According to Felda’s Annual Report 2016, the average smallholde­r’s income for oil palm is around RM3,173 per month from RM1,499 per month from rubber.

 ??  ?? Trade block: Mah says the government views this as unacceptab­le and a protection­ist trade barrier, and a breach of the EU’s WTO commitment­s.
Trade block: Mah says the government views this as unacceptab­le and a protection­ist trade barrier, and a breach of the EU’s WTO commitment­s.

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