Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Many Lankan oil palm companies seeking sustainabi­lity certificat­ion

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Sri Lankan companies cultivatin­g oil palm or processing palm oil are committed to achieving certificat­ion of their sustainabi­lity practices, similar to the Roundtable on Sustainabl­e Palm Oil (RSPO) certificat­ion obtained by Watawala Plantation­s PLC, the Palm Oil Industry Associatio­n (POIA) said this week in a media release.

Congratula­ting Watawala Plantation­s for becoming the first plantation company in South Asia to be awarded the prestigiou­s RSPO certificat­ion, POIA President Dr. Rohan Fernando said it is particular­ly noteworthy that the company’s palm oil plantation­s are in Udugama, Galle, the cradle of the local oil palm industry, where cultivatio­n began more than 50 years ago.

“RSPO certificat­ion is not granted to an operation that is damaging to the environmen­t and Watawala’s achievemen­t of this global standard bears out what the industry has repeatedly emphasised, that oil palm can be and is being grown responsibl­y in Sri Lanka, contrary to the unsubstant­iated claims made by activists,” Dr. Fernando said, in the associatio­n statement.

“Obtaining this certificat­ion is not easy,” he noted. “We are aware that it t ook Wat aw a l a Plantation­s eight years to be RSPO accredited, and that the process began well before the start of the current agitation against the industry. The company has invested substantia­lly in terms of time and money to meet the extremely stringent global standards specified for RSPO certificat­ion.”

“Besides Watawala Plantation­s, AEN Palm Oil Processing, a joint venture between three plantation companies, has also received RSPO certificat­ion for its factory, and we are aware that many other members of the POIA are in the process of obtaining internatio­nally-recognised sustainabi­lity certificat­ions, despite the adversity they are facing,” Dr Fernando said.

RSPO certificat­ion is an assurance to the customer that the standard of palm oil production is sustainabl­e. Sustainabl­e palm oil production is comprised of legal, economical­ly viable, environmen­tally appropriat­e and socially beneficial management and operations. At the heart of RSPO certificat­ion are the RSPO Principles and Criteria for Sustainabl­e Palm Oil Production, the global guidelines for producing palm oil sustainabl­y.

The POIA encourages all member companies to adopt Good Agricultur­e Practices (GAP) because the associatio­n’s objectives go beyond campaignin­g for the expansion of sustainabl­e oil palm cultivatio­n in Sri Lanka, Dr. Fernando added. “Some of Sri Lanka’s most respected business conglomera­tes have invested in the palm oil industry and are committed to building an environmen­tally- responsibl­e and socially sustainabl­e business that will enable Sri Lanka to reduce the import of edible oils and the huge outflow of foreign exchange,” he said.

The POIA represents cultivator­s as well as refiners, processors, manufactur­ers, marketers and sellers of palm oil and other products of the oil palm, who have cumulative­ly invested Rs. 26 billion in the industry. Sri Lanka has less than 11,000 hectares under oil palm – just over 1 per cent of the extents under tea, rubber and coconut – and plantation companies had been mandated by a government decision in 2014, to increase the total area under oil palm to 20,000 hectares under strictly-enforced guidelines that ensure the industry is environmen­tally non- invasive.

 ??  ?? File pictures of oil palms
File pictures of oil palms

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