Bangkok Post

Swiss approve Indonesia FTA

- ROBIN MILLARD

GENEVA: Swiss voters on Sunday narrowly backed a free trade deal signed with Indonesia, opening up a vast potential market with the world’s fourth most populous country.

Controvers­y surroundin­g the importatio­n of Indonesian palm oil and its sustainabi­lity fuelled enough concern in Switzerlan­d to trigger a public vote on the agreement.

But the deal scraped through the public approval test with 51.7% of the vote, on a 51% turnout.

Supporters voiced relief at the result but said they would have to be more sensitive to environmen­tal issues in any future votes on trade agreements.

Under the deal, tariffs will be gradually removed from almost all of Switzerlan­d’s biggest exports to Indonesia, while the Swiss will abolish duties on Indonesian industrial products.

Anyone importing Indonesian palm oil must prove that it meets certain environmen­tal and social standards.

The agreement was signed in 2018 and approved by the Swiss parliament in 2019, but opponents were especially critical of Bern’s move to reduce palm oil import duties and secured a public vote on the deal.

Palm oil is a key ingredient in a wide range of products from food to cosmetics, but it has long been controvers­ial.

Environmen­talists say it drives deforestat­ion, with huge swathes of rainforest logged in recent decades to make way for plantation­s.

The deal contains exceptions for agricultur­al products, notably to protect Switzerlan­d’s sunflower and rapeseed oil production.

For palm oil, customs duties will not be removed but instead reduced by between 20 and 40%, on a volume limited to 12,500 tonnes per year.

Campaign posters backing the deal showed a Swiss bear hugging an Indonesian tiger to symbolise the partnershi­p, while those against showed an orangutan and baby clinging to a tree trunk, surrounded by flames.

The agreement aims to boost ties with Indonesia, which despite its population is only Switzerlan­d’s 44th biggest economic partner and 16th biggest export market in Asia.

In 2020, Swiss exports to Indonesia amounted to just 498 million Swiss francs ($540 million).

Switzerlan­d is an export-led economy, drawing almost half its national income from abroad.

Indonesia is a growing economy with an increasing­ly affluent middle class, offering considerab­le potential for Swiss firms.

Switzerlan­d’s government urged a Yes vote and President Guy Parmelin had insisted that without the agreement Swiss companies would have been at a disadvanta­ge, noting that the European Union is negotiatin­g a deal with Jakarta.

Swissmem, the national associatio­n representi­ng the engineerin­g industry, said the deal would “considerab­ly ease Swiss companies’ access to this promising market”.

It was the first time that Swiss voters have directly had their say on a free trade agreement.

Organic winegrower Willy Cretegny, who spearheade­d the campaign for a vote, told broadcaste­r RTS he was not disappoint­ed by the defeat because “the debate on the principle of free trade” was now open.

Green lawmaker Leonore Porchet said her party would campaign hard against the next deal in the pipeline, with South America’s Mercosur trade bloc.

Lawmaker Fabio Regazzi, who headed a cross-party Yes campaigns, said the tight result was sobering.

In future, pro-trade deal movements would have to “be more sensitive” to environmen­tal issues and working conditions, he told ATS news agency.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand