Kuwait Times

Europe food makers find green palm oil hard to stomach

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Europe, the world’s second-biggest buyer of palm oil, is set to miss a 2020 target backed by about 10 countries, as well as big companies, to use 100-percent sustainabl­e supplies of the edible oil in food ingredient­s, environmen­tal experts warn. A lack of public awareness and debate around the palm oil industry has left nations like Italy, Spain and Poland lagging behind their neighbors in green palm oil purchases, a January report by The Sustainabl­e Trade Initiative (IDH) said. “Countries in northweste­rn Europe are leading the pack,” said Daan Wensing, a director at IDH, a Netherland­s-based nonprofit. “Other major destinatio­ns are just getting started.”

In addition to a lack of government action to force buyers to purchase sustainabl­e palm oil, Wensing said European catering firms and animal feed companies are not coming under consumer pressure to source greener supplies. “The industries that are consumerfa­cing have stepped up, but sectors like canteen catering services are not really playing ball yet,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

As the world’s most widely used edible oil, palm oil is found in everything from margarine to biscuits and soap to soups, as well as in biofuel. But in recent years, the industry has come under close scrutiny from green activists and consumers, who have blamed it for clearing forests for plantation­s and causing fires, along with the exploitati­on of workers.

In response, about 10 European government­s including France, the Netherland­s and Britain - and major corporate buyers of palm oil like Nestle, Mondelez, PepsiCo and Unilever pledged to purchase only sustainabl­e palm oil by 2020. The European Union has also approved a law to phase out palm oilbased biofuels by 2030, causing outrage in top producer nations Indonesia and Malaysia.

But with less than two years to go until the end of 2020, only 74 percent of palm oil bought by Europe’s food industry was certified as sustainabl­e, the IDH report said. “To meet the 100-percent target by 2020 is going to be very difficult because now we move into these markets where there is no consumer pressure or awareness,” said Wensing.

Cart before horse

Palm oil certified as sustainabl­e by the global industry watchdog, the Roundtable on Sustainabl­e Palm Oil (RSPO), accounts for about a fifth of global output, at an estimated 12.3 million tons per year. It sells at a premium but demand covers just half of supply. Europe imported an estimated 7 million tons of palm oil in 2017, according to consultanc­y LMC Internatio­nal, with about 2.6 million tons of that used for food production.

Anne Rosenbarge­r, Southeast Asia commoditie­s manager at the World Resources Institute Indonesia, said the debate around palm oil had often been politicize­d, further confusing consumers. British supermarke­t chain Iceland, for example, said last year it would remove palm oil from its own-brand food by the end of 2018 as part of efforts to stem deforestat­ion. The retailer was then banned from showing a palm oilthemed Christmas advert on television because it was deemed to breach political advertisin­g rules.

Such controvers­ies around palm-oil boycotts are making major brands wary of using the RSPO logo on their products and drawing attention to their use of palm oil, said Rosenbarge­r. Building greater awareness of sustainabl­e palm oil and the RSPO among consumers would encourage more food makers to use the trademark on their products, she added. Improving transparen­cy around the way the RSPO applies its standards and handles complaints would also help convince more brands to use the logo, researcher­s said.

The RSPO is backed by major European buyers and has more than 4,000 members, including producers, traders, consumer goods firms and green groups. Even if the “extremely ambitious” 2020 targets set by European buyers fall short, they were required to drive the transforma­tion seen in companies over the last few years, said Rosenbarge­r, who is also co-chair of the RSPO. “There was a little bit of cart before the horse, but that’s part of the growing pains of what needed to happen,” she said.

No deforestat­ion

While many companies have put in place sustainabl­e palm oil policies, action and implementa­tion have often been lacking throughout supply chains, said Grant Rosoman, Asia-Pacific campaign advisor at Greenpeace Internatio­nal. He said it was unlikely the 2020 goals would be met because “no deforestat­ion” commitment­s take years to implement. “A lot of the big traders and buyers just don’t want to pay enough for what it takes to do proper, responsibl­y produced palm oil,” he said.

European countries that have pledged to buy only sustainabl­e palm oil should enforce those commitment­s even if they are just refining or taking port deliveries of palm oil to be delivered across Europe, said IDH’s Wensing. He called on more European government­s to make the 2020 pledge on sustainabl­e palm oil, and for more awareness campaigns to change consumer attitudes and demand. “Government­s need to step up their game to make sure it (sustainabl­e palm oil) is the norm in Europe,” he said. — Reuters

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