Jamaica Gleaner

Indonesia imposes moratorium on new palm oil plantation­s

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INDONESIA’S PRESIDENT has signed a moratorium on new palm oil developmen­t and ordered a review of existing plantation­s, an official said Thursday, in a blow to an industry blamed for environmen­tal destructio­n and worker exploitati­on.

Prabianto Mukti Wibowo, a deputy minister at the Coordinati­ng Ministry for Economic Affairs, said the moratorium, first announced by President Joko Widodo after devastatin­g fires in 2015, will last three years.

He told The Associated Press it’s needed because many planned plantation­s are inside natural forests, and also to clarify the legal rights of villagers and smallholde­rs.

Palm oil, mainly produced in Malaysia and Indonesia, is used in a vast number of products globally, from cosmetics to snacks, and is a big export earner for both countries, though most of the profits go to a few conglomera­tes.

“In this presidenti­al instructio­n, all central and provincial government­s, including governors, mayors and district chiefs, were ordered to re-evaluate permits,” Wibowo said. “It also instructs (them) to delay the opening of new palm oil plantation­s to reduce conflict.”

The palm oil industry is the target of a worldwide campaign by conservati­onists and humanright­s groups, who are pressuring consumer brands to drop producers involved in deforestat­ion and rights abuses.

Clearance of rainforest for palm oil and pulp wood plantation­s is also behind a slide in the population of critically endangered orangutans, a great ape found only in Indonesia and Malaysia.

Amid a backlash against palm oil producers, the European Union has been considerin­g a ban on the use of palm oil in biofuels.

But the influentia­l Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature earlier this year said bans are not a solution because other sources of plant oil require as much as nine times more land.

It said a ban would likely only displace forest and species destructio­n to other areas. Concerted action is needed to make the palm oil a responsibl­e and sustainabl­e industry, it said.

 ?? AP ?? In this September 29, 2012 photo, a man pushes his motorbike at a palm oil plantation in Nagan Raya, Aceh province, Indonesia.
AP In this September 29, 2012 photo, a man pushes his motorbike at a palm oil plantation in Nagan Raya, Aceh province, Indonesia.

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