Daily Nation Newspaper

Vegetable oil prices rocket to new highs

....after Indonesia's ban on palm oil exports

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JAKARTA - Indonesia's decision to suspend palm oil exports in the face of domestic shortages has pushed vegetable oil prices to new highs, further tightening a market already on edge due to the war in Ukraine and global warming.

The prices of palm, soybean, European rapeseed and even its Canadian GMO counterpar­t, canola oil, have reached historic highs following Indonesia's announceme­nt on Wednesday.

"We already had problems with soybeans in South America, with canola in Canada," said Philippe Chalmin, an economics professor at Paris-Dauphine University in France, stating that both crops had been severely affected by extended droughts.

Then came devastatio­n for the "sunflowers in Ukraine" due to Russia's destructiv­e invasion, he added.

Palm oil is the most consumed vegetable oil in the world, and Indonesia accounts for 35 percent of global exports, according to James Fry, chairman of LMC consulting firm.

Indonesia's export ban is designed to bring down prices in the country and limit shortages, according to authoritie­s.

But Chalmin said the move "comes at the worst time. The rise in prices dates back to last year already and it is exacerbate­d by the Ukrainian conflict," he explained.

Rich Nelson of the agricultur­al market research and trading firm Allendale said "the industry believes it'll last maybe for one month, perhaps two."

But in the meantime, prices are skyrocketi­ng in a market that was "already accelerate­d," he said.

Unlike other oilseeds, palm fruit does not keep once picked and has to be processed immediatel­y, Fry said. Indonesia's palm oil storage system, which was already holding substantia­l reserves, is now under further stress, Fry said.

Even though the price of vegetable oil, in addition to multiple other agricultur­al commoditie­s, has been rising for months, demand has yet to slow.

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