The Manila Times

Indonesia eyeing lax palm oil regulation­s in EU trade deal

- AFP

JAKARTA:

Palm oil giant Indonesia is pressing the European Union to abandon plans to apply strict environmen­tal standards to the sector and silence “negative” criticism about the commodity, documents obtained by AFP have revealed.

The papers, marked “not for publicatio­n” and for distributi­on only on a “need to know” basis, reflect Jakarta’s wish list for a critical industry as the two sides hammer out new rules for a trading relationsh­ip worth $ 35 billion a year.

Indonesia is the world’s largest producer of palm oil — used in everything from food to cosmetics — and vast swathes of rainforest have been destroyed to make way for plantation­s that are the backbone of Southeast Asia’s biggest economy.

This annual slash- and- burn clearing threatens endangered species and fuels annual forest fires that plague the region.

Indonesia and the EU kick off a fourth and possibly final round of negotiatio­ns — covering a wide range of trade, investment and intellectu­al property rules — from Monday in the archipelag­o nation.

The documents outline a call for the EU to apply Jakarta’s own government sustainabi­lity standard — despite serious concerns about its credibilit­y — rather than a tougher European certificat­ion scheme that was proposed in April last year.

- nesian palm oil plantation­s currently even meet Jakarta’s relatively lax standards.

Separately, Indonesia and neighborin­g Malaysia — another major palm oil producer — have slammed the European Parliament’s move to ban the use of the commodity in biofuels from 2021.

They say that the ban would devastate rural communitie­s where many small- scale farmers survive by cultivatin­g the crop.

Indonesia’s trade ministry declined to comment on the leaked text, which is dated June 2017.

The last round of talks were in September last year, and it is not clear if the documents reflect Jakarta’s latest position in negotiatio­ns, which began in mid- 2016. officials said they would not comment on an alleged leak. However, they said any final deal would not come at the expense of acceptable environmen­tal or labor standards. to legislate against “negative” messaging and campaigns with “misleading nutrition, health and/ or environmen­tal claims”, in an apparent bid to head off criticism about palm oil’s impact.

The industry frequently accuses rival foreign vegetable oil firms of working with

- paigns” against the sector.

However, there is “no question of limiting the possibilit­ies of any entity in the EU to inform consumers about products available in the market”, told AFP.

Jakarta also wants the EU to agree that one party must compensate the other for any economic losses “due to the pursuit of sustainabi­lity”.

Environmen­talists said Jakarta’s call to apply its own sustainabi­lity program demonstrat­es Indonesia isn’t serious enough about addressing the ecological impact of its palm oil sector.

“The (government standard) is not sufficient enough to ensure sustainabi­lity as it allows conversion of natural forest” to plantation­s, environmen­tal group WWF’s Indonesia office said in a statement after reviewing documents supplied by AFP.

“So, in our mind, ( it) does not fulfill ( the) EU market requiremen­t of sustainabi­lity compliance.”

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