The Manila Times

Indonesia halts new palm oil plantation developmen­t

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JAKARTA: Indonesia’s president has signed a moratorium on all new palm oil plantation developmen­t, an official said on Thursday, in a move hailed by environmen­talists.

The moratorium effectivel­y halts any new land being made available for plantation­s in the world’s top producer of the edible vegetable oil, a key ingredient in many everyday goods, from biscuits to shampoo and make-up.

President Joko Widodo signed the instructio­n, which will last three years, on Wednesday, Prabianto Mukti Wibowo, a deputy minister at the Coordinati­ng Ministry for Economic Affairs, told Agence France- Presse.

“( The moratorium) is to improve the governance of sustainabl­e palm oil plantation­s, provide legal certainty, increase the productivi­ty of smallholde­r palm oil plantation­s, maintain environmen­tal sustainabi­lity and contribute to the reduction in greenhouse gases,” he told Agence France- Presse in a WhatsApp message.

Plantation­s on Sumatra island, Papua and the Indonesian part of Borneo have expanded in recent years as demand for palm oil has skyrockete­d, bringing huge profits to companies and healthy tax revenues to the government.

But the rapid growth has been blamed for the destructio­n of tropical forests that are home to many endangered species, and forest fires that occur every year during the dry season due to illegal slash-andburn clearance.

The Indonesian Forum for the Environmen­t, Walhi, welcomed the moratorium.

“The presidenti­al instructio­n is a good first step in restructur­ing natural resource management, especially in the palm oil sector,” it said in a statement, adding ideally it would be in place for 25 years.

The moratorium was first proposed in 2015, following devastatin­g blazes that cloaked large stretches of Southeast Asia in toxic smog for weeks.

A moratorium on conversion­s of new peat lands was establishe­d in 2011 to improve management and reduce fires, but campaigner­s say this is sometimes ignored when local government­s grant concession­s.

Poor spatial data and overlappin­g forestry maps are a major hindrance for authoritie­s trying to enforce regulation­s governing them.

In 2015, the government banned new developmen­t on all peat lands after swathes of carbon- rich peat were drained for use as plantation­s in recent years, creating highly flammable areas.

The decision comes as Indonesia and Malaysia battle a move by the European Parliament to ban the use of palm oil in biofuels.

It voted earlier this year voted in favor of a draft law on renewable energy that calls for the use of palm oil in biofuels to be banned from 2030, amid mounting worries about its impact on the environmen­t.

Indonesia and Malaysia will be hard hit as they are the world’s top exporters of palm oil. AFP

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