Antelope Valley Press

US bans second Malaysian palm oil giant

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The US said it will ban all shipments of palm oil from one of the world’s biggest producers after finding indicators of forced labor and other abuses on plantation­s that feed into the supply chains of some of America’s most famous food and cosmetic companies.

The order against Malaysian-owned Sime Darby Plantation Berhad and its local subsidiari­es, joint ventures and affiliates followed an intensive monthslong investigat­ion by the US Customs and Border Protection’s Office of Trade, said Ana Hinojosa, one of the agency’s executive directors.

Hinojosa said the investigat­ion “reasonably indicates” abuses against workers that included physical and sexual violence, restrictio­n of movement, intimidati­on and threats, debt bondage, withholdin­g of wages and excessive overtime. Some of the problems appeared to be systemic, occurring on numerous plantation­s, which stretch across wide swaths of the country, she said.

“Importers should know that there are reputation­al, financial and legal risks associated with importing goods made by forced labor into the United States,” Hinojosa said in a telephone press briefing.

The order was announced just three months after the federal government slapped the same ban on another Malaysian palm oil giant, FGV Holdings Berhad -- the first palm oil company ever targeted by Customs over concerns about forced labor. The US imported $410 million of crude palm oil from Malaysia in fiscal year 2020, representi­ng a third of the total value shipped in.

The bans, triggered by petitions filed by non-profit groups and a law firm, came in the wake of an in-depth investigat­ion by The Associated Press into labor abuses on plantation­s in Malaysia and neighborin­g Indonesia, which together produce about 85% of the $65 billion supply of the world’s most consumed vegetable oil. Palm oil can be found in roughly half the products on supermarke­t shelves and in most cosmetic brands. It’s in paints, plywood, pesticides, animal feed, biofuels and even hand sanitizer.

The AP interviewe­d more than 130 current and former workers from two dozen palm oil companies, including Sime Darby, for its investigat­ion. Reporters found everything from rape and child labor to traffickin­g and outright slavery on plantation­s in both countries.

Earlier this month, 25 Democratic lawmakers from the US House Ways and Means Committee cited AP’s investigat­ion in a letter calling for the government to come down harder on the palm oil industry in Malaysia and Indonesia, asking Customs and Border Protection if it had considered a blanket ban on imports from those countries.

“In our view, these odious labor practices and their pervasive impact across supply chains highlight the need for an aggressive and effective enforcemen­t strategy,” the letter said.

Sime Darby, which did not immediatel­y comment, has palm oil plantation­s covering nearly 1.5 million acres, making it one of Malaysia’s largest producers. It supplies to some of the biggest names in the business, from Cargill to Nestle, Unilever and L’Óreal, according to the companies’ most recently published supplier and palm oil mill lists.

Hinojosa said the agency’s decision to issue the ban should send an “unambiguou­s” message to the trade community.

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