Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Local oil palm industry offers to support govt. domestic agricultur­e drive

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Sri Lanka’s oil palm cultivator­s can provide tangible support to the government’s efforts to promote local agricultur­e and import substituti­on as a response to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the national economy, the sector’s main industry associatio­n has said.

In a statement, the Palm Oil Industry Associatio­n (POIA) which represents cultivator­s as well as refiners, processors, manufactur­ers, marketers and sellers of palm oil and other products of the oil palm, said the local industry could help mitigate the effects on multiple sectors, of the increase in the special commodity levy on imported palm oil.

Sri Lanka already has 9,000 hectares of oil palm, cultivated under highly- regulated conditions, to ensure the industry is environmen­tally non-invasive; and plantation companies have been mandated to increase the country’s total area under oil palm to 20,000 hectares under strictly- enforced guidelines, the associatio­n said.

However, the ‘baseless vilificati­on’ of the local palm oil industry by elements with vested interests has seriously delayed the government-approved expansion of cultivatio­n, leading to the country producing just 23,000 tonnes of palm oil per annum and the import of a staggering 240,000 tonnes of crude palm oil into the country each year, the POIA said.

“Numerous sectors such as confection­ery manufactur­ers have already expressed concern on the increase in their costs of production as a result of the imposition of the special commodity levy on imported palm oil,”

POIA President Dr. Rohan Fernando said. “Confection­ery manufactur­ers, for example, have said they would start making losses of Rs 100 million per month as a result of the higher cost of imported palm oil.”

“While we understand and appreciate the factors that have necessitat­ed the imposition of the levy, we feel this is an opportune moment for the government to support the local palm oil industry, especially since it can contribute significan­tly to the government’s drive to promote domestic production and self-sufficienc­y as a long term goal. Palm oil cultivatio­n is already helping save valuable foreign exchange by reducing imports at a time the country is trying to conserve foreign currency, and has the potential to help Sri Lanka conserve even more foreign exchange in the years ahead.”

Dr. Fernando conceded that the local palm oil industry would not be in a position to supply all of Sri Lanka’s palm oil requiremen­ts for several years, but emphasised that allowing the industry to proceed with investment­s in the pipeline would enable a foundation to be laid for substantia­l import substituti­on in the medium term.

The palm oil industry currently employs about 13,000 people in cultivatio­n, refining and production. The plantation companies had implemente­d all health and safety measures recommende­d for workers in oil palm plantation­s and ensured that the estates resumed work within days of the declaratio­n of a country-wide curfew in March this year, conscious of the importance of keeping production going, Dr. Fernando disclosed.

He added: “It is absurd that activists and lobbyists with vested interests who have been campaignin­g against oil palm on the basis of events that took place decades ago in some other parts of the world, ignore the fact that it has taken 50 years for Sri Lanka to cultivate 9,000 hectares of oil palm, and that even after oil palm cultivatio­n ultimately reaches the government-mandated 20,000 hectares, the crop would account for only 2.5 per cent of the extent under tea, rubber and coconut.”

“They also ignore the fact that the government decision to encourage cultivatio­n of oil palm is backed by comprehens­ive conditions and guidelines that ensure there will be no environmen­tal degradatio­n, no deforestat­ion and no replacemen­t of other viable crops,” Dr. Fernando said.

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