Western Mail

Store bans palm oil in own-brand products

- EMILY BEAMENT newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

ICELAND has pledged to stop using palm oil as an ingredient in its own brand food by the end of 2018, warning that it drives the destructio­n of rainforest­s.

The Flintshire-based company said it is taking the product out of 130 food lines, which will reduce demand by more than 500 tonnes per year, with palm oil already replaced with alternativ­es such as sunflower oil and butter in half of them.

Growing demand for palm oil for use in food, toiletries and biofuel has helped fuel widespread deforestat­ion in southeast Asia, prompting industry efforts to promote “sustainabl­e” palm oil which is not environmen­tally damaging.

But Iceland managing director Richard Walker said the company did not believe there was verifiably sustainabl­e palm oil on the mass market and so was removing it all together.

Iceland pointed to studies which showed palm oil and wood pulp plantation­s were the biggest driver of deforestat­ion in Indonesia and Malaysia, pushing many species towards extinction.

One study, published in the journal Current Biology earlier this year, found that half of Bornean orangutans were affected by logging, deforestat­ion, or industrial­ised plantation­s, with 100,000 lost between 1999 and 2015. The loss of rainforest­s also contribute­s significan­tly to the world’s rising greenhouse gas emissions.

While palm oil is found in more than half of all supermarke­t products from biscuits and breakfast cereals to soap, 35% of consumers are unaware of what it is, a survey of 5,000 people commission­ed by Iceland found.

Mr Walker said: “Until Iceland can guarantee palm oil is not causing rainforest destructio­n, we are simply saying ‘no to palm oil’. We don’t believe there is such a thing as verifiably ‘sustainabl­e’ palm oil available in the mass market, so we are giving consumers a choice for the first time.

“Having recently been to Indonesia and seen the environmen­tal devastatio­n caused by expanding palm oil production first hand, I feel passionate­ly about the importance of raising awareness of this issue.

Greenpeace UK executive director John Sauven, said Iceland’s move was a direct response to the palm oil industry’s “failure to clean up its act”.

He said: “As global temperatur­es rise from burning forests, and population­s of endangered species continue to dwindle, companies using agricultur­al commoditie­s like palm oil will come under increasing pressure to clean up their supply chains.”

 ?? Jayaprakas­h Joghee Bojan ?? > Orangutans, pictured here in Indonesia, are just one of the species which have seen their habitat depleted by deforestat­ion for palm oil plantation­s
Jayaprakas­h Joghee Bojan > Orangutans, pictured here in Indonesia, are just one of the species which have seen their habitat depleted by deforestat­ion for palm oil plantation­s
 ??  ?? > Richard Walker
> Richard Walker

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom