The Star Malaysia

Smallholde­rs get help in obtaining MSPO cert

Govt allocates RM130mil for oil palm owners to obtain certificat­ion

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PUTRAJAYA: The Government has allocated RM130mil as an incentive for oil palm smallholde­rs to help them obtain Malaysia Sustainabl­e Palm Oil (MSPO) certificat­ion for free.

Plantation Industries and Commoditie­s Minister Datuk Seri Mah Siew Keong said in view of the mandatory implementa­tion of the MSPO by end2019, the incentive would ease their financial burden by providing for the certificat­ion's auditing fees.

“We plan to carry out the audit on 650,000 smallholde­rs in batches, and it would involve close to two million hectares of oil palm plantation,” he told reporters here yesterday.

For now, he said, only 4% of about 244,622ha of plantation­s, including 7,113ha owned by smallholde­rs and 22 mills, had voluntaril­y obtained the certificat­ion since it was introduced in January 2015.

Mah said the incentive would involve 40% from the total of 5.7 million hectares of oil palm plantation in Malaysia.

“By giving the incentive, the ministry is targeting about 500,000ha of oil palm plantation to be MSPO-certified by year-end, and the number will continue to increase next year.

“The ministry will be conducting roadshows to brief the smallholde­rs on the importance of the certificat­ion, especially in ensuring the sustainabi­lity of the local oil palm industry in the future,” he said.

Through the MSPO certificat­ion scheme, he said, palm oil products would be able to command premium prices in the internatio­nal market, in line with demands from European countries which only allowed for palm oil imports with accredited certificat­ion.

“The MSPO is more suitable for the country compared to the Roundtable on Sustainabl­e Palm Oil certificat­ion process and the cost of its implementa­tion is much lower.

“Although the MSPO certificat­e has not been recognised by any country at the moment, we hope that its mandatory implementa­tion by end-2019 will show that MSPO is a certificat­e which has been establishe­d according to the law and that domestic regulation­s also have good sustainabi­lity practices.

“We are confident the MSPO will be well-received by the local industry players, and the ministry will promote this certificat­ion aggressive­ly overseas to ensure that it is accepted in the internatio­nal market,” he said.

Mah said the details on the incentives and the applicatio­n procedures would be available on the Malaysian Palm Oil Board's website soon. – Bernama

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