The Star Malaysia

Benchmark MSPO against global standards

- HILARY KUNG SIEW HWEI Kuala Lumpur

I REFER to the report, “Teresa Kok and Shafie Apdal discuss sustainabl­e palm oil and timber industries” ( The Star, Sept 20).

It is encouragin­g to see the new Primary Industries MInister, Teresa Kok, to be very engaged in moving the Malaysian palm oil industry on the road to achieving Malaysian Sustainabl­e Palm Oil (MSPO) standards.

However, in view of the European Union and palm oil issues, I would like to ask how confident are we that MSPO standards are meeting marketplac­e standards in importing countries?

The same concern is also raised in a report on the comparison between the Roundtable on Sustainabl­e Palm Oil (RSPO) and MSPO certificat­ion schemes and an assessment of the MSPO certificat­ion scheme released by WWF Malaysia on April 16 this year.

New oil palm developmen­t on peatland is one of the key topics being discussed by the EU, but MSPO standards address only sustainabl­e cultivatio­n on peatland, not deforestat­ion on peat forest.

Secondly, MSPO does not allow planting on land with high biodiversi­ty value unless it is carried out in compliance with national or state biodiversi­ty legislatio­n.

This does not fully address the “No Deforestat­ion” issue, especially when land matters fall under state jurisdicti­on and a huge amount of forest reserve is being de-gazetted.

Therefore, I would say that it is hopeful to see that we are moving towards MSPO.

However, as per the Pakatan Harapan Promise 39, this needs to be reviewed and benchmarke­d against Internatio­nal Best Practices. As a concerned citizen, I must ask, “How can we take into account the requiremen­ts of importing countries while envisionin­g a sustainabl­e future for our palm oil industry?”

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