San Francisco Chronicle

Palm oil labor abuse linked to top brands

- By Margie Mason and Robin McDowell Margie Mason and Robin McDowell are Associated Press writers.

PENINSULAR MALAYSIA — An invisible workforce of millions of laborers from some of the poorest corners of Asia toil in the palm oil industry, many of them enduring various forms of exploitati­on, with the most serious abuses including child labor, outright slavery and allegation­s of rape, an Associated Press investigat­ion has found.

In Malaysia and Indonesia, these workers tend the heavy reddishora­nge palm oil fruit that makes its way into the supply chains of many iconic food and cosmetics companies like Unilever, L’Oreal, Nestle and Procter & Gamble.

Together, the two countries produce about 85% of the world’s estimated $65 billion palm oil supply.

Palm oil is virtually impossible to avoid. Often disguised on labels as an ingredient listed by more than 200 names, it can be found in roughly half the products on supermarke­t shelves and in most cosmetic brands. It’s contained in paints, plywood, pesticides and pills. It’s also present in animal feed, biofuels and even hand sanitizer.

The AP interviewe­d nearly 130 current and former workers from two dozen palm oil companies who came from eight countries and labored on plantation­s across wide swaths of Malaysia and Indonesia. Almost all had complaints against their treatment, with some saying they were cheated, threatened, held against their will or forced to work off unsurmount­able debts. Others said they were regularly harassed by authoritie­s, swept up in raids and detained in crowded government facilities.

They included members of Myanmar’s long-persecuted Rohingya Muslim minority, who fled ethnic cleansing in their homeland only to be sold into the palm oil industry. Fishermen who escaped years of slavery on boats also described coming ashore in search of help, only to be trafficked onto plantation­s — sometimes with police involvemen­t. They said they worked for little or no pay and were trapped for years.

The AP used the most recently published data from producers, traders and buyers of the world’s mostconsum­ed vegetable oil, as well as U.S. Customs records, to link the laborers’ palm oil and its derivative­s from the mills that process it to the supply chains of top Western companies like the makers of Oreo cookies, Lysol cleaners and some of Hershey’s chocolatey treats.

AP reporters witnessed some abuses firsthand and reviewed police reports, complaints made to labor unions, videos and photos smuggled out of plantation­s and local media stories to corroborat­e accounts.

Though labor issues have largely been ignored, the punishing effects of palm oil on the environmen­t have been decried for years. Still, giant Western financial institutio­ns like JPMorgan Chase, Deutsche Bank and the Vanguard Group have continued to help fuel a crop that has exploded globally, soaring from just 5 million tons in 1999 to 72 million tons today, according to the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e.

 ?? Binsar Bakkara / Associated Press ?? Bangladesh­i men head to an immigratio­n center in Medan, Indonesia, after some were found locked in a house, waiting to be taken to palm oil plantation­s.
Binsar Bakkara / Associated Press Bangladesh­i men head to an immigratio­n center in Medan, Indonesia, after some were found locked in a house, waiting to be taken to palm oil plantation­s.

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