Cyprus Today

UK supermarke­t Iceland pledges no palm oil in its own-brand goods

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BRITISH supermarke­t chain Iceland said on Monday it would remove palm oil from its ownbrand food by the end of 2018 as part of efforts to stem deforestat­ion in Indonesia and Malaysia and help species under threat of extinction.

Iceland, which trades from 900 stores and which specialise­s in frozen food, said cutting palm oil would lower demand for the edible vegetable oil by more than 500 tonnes a year.

“Until Iceland can guarantee palm oil is not causing rainforest destructio­n, we are simply saying ‘no to palm oil’,” Iceland managing director Richard Walker said in a statement.

“We don’t believe there is such a thing as ‘sustainabl­e’ palm oil available to retailers, so we are giving consumers a choice about what they buy.”

The company said it had already removed palm oil from half of its own-brand products.

Indonesia has one of the highest rates of deforestat­ion in the world, mainly due to clearing for palm oil and other plantation­s or mills.

In the last half century more than 74 million hectares of Indonesian forest, an area twice the size of Germany, have been logged, burned or degraded, according to environmen­tal group Greenpeace.

The rapid expansion has also resulted in a loss of habitat for many species, including Bornean orangutans, which are among the world’s most imperiled great apes.

“It’s a real wake up call to the industry to say you need to clean up,” Alison Kirkman, a press officer with Greenpeace UK, said.

She added companies needed to work towards a clean palm oil supply chain, and drop traders causing deforestat­ion.

Iceland’s decision was questioned by the Roundtable on Sustainabl­e Palm Oil (RSPO), a body promoting sustainabi­lity in the palm oil industry, and whose members include plantation­s as well as environmen­tal groups and consumer goods manufactur­ers.

RSPO head Darrel Webber said businesses should consider the impact that alternativ­es to palm oil might have.

“We should let consumers know that palm trees produce four to 10 times more oil per hectare than any other oil crop. Therefore eliminatin­g palm oil might lead to the use of more land with higher risks of deforestat­ion,” Mr Webber said via Twitter.

The $62 billion palm oil industry has been plagued by concerns about deforestat­ion and rights abuses in countries such as Indonesia, the world’s biggest producer. Palm oil is used in products from snacks and soaps to cosmetics and biofuels.

In January, privately-owned Iceland pledged to eliminate plastic packaging from its ownbrand products by the end of 2023, a first by a major British grocer.

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