Kuwait Times

Kit Kat, Dove makers could face fines

The green palm oil push

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KUALA LUMPUR: Companies that make top brands including Kit Kat chocolate and Dove soap may face fines if they fail to buy more green palm oil under new rules aimed at improving the controvers­ial industry’s environmen­tal sustainabi­lity. Green groups cautiously welcomed the move from the Roundtable on Sustainabl­e Palm Oil (RSPO), a watchdog that sets environmen­tallyfrien­dly standards and brings together a wide range of industry players, but were sceptical the rules would be strictly enforced.

The world’s most widely used vegetable oil is found in everything from biscuits to make-up, but has long drawn the ire of environmen­talists who blame it for fuelling widespread deforestat­ion. Swathes of jungle, particular­ly in the world’s top producers Indonesia and Malaysia, continue to be cleared as plantation­s expand aggressive­ly, laying waste to the habitats of a kaleidosco­pe of rare animals, including endangered orangutans and Borneo pygmy elephants.

Consumer pressure has increased in the West as activists mount strident campaigns denouncing the destructiv­e industry, leading some companies to cut back on the commodity or stop using it entirely. Public disgust was underlined last year when millions viewed a

Christmas advert from British supermarke­t chain Iceland, which has stopped using palm oil in its own-brand products, featuring a cartoon orangutan telling a little girl its jungle home had been destroyed.

Iceland’s managing director had previously criticized the “agonizingl­y slow” progress in sustainabl­e palm oil production. The RSPO was establishe­d in 2004 to promote green palm oil, and developed criteria for growers who want their product certified as “sustainabl­e”. These include a ban on logging virgin forests for plantation­s and reducing use of fires - which sometimes burn out of control and spew toxic haze into the air - to clear land, but activists regularly criticize the body for failing to enforce its rules.

Joining the Kuala Lumpur-headquarte­red body is voluntary and it has attracted over 4,000 members, including growers, consumer goods giants and traders. Nineteen percent of palm oil globally is now RSPO-certified. Major companies value membership as it boosts their green credential­s and losing it can bring a flood of negative publicity. When Kit Kat maker Nestle was thrown out last year for breaching the rules, they regained their membership

Green credential­s

within weeks after scrambling to meet requiremen­ts.

Critics however say progress towards making the industry more environmen­tally friendly has been hampered as major firms such as Nestle and Unilever, which owns Dove, are not purchasing enough of the more expensive sustainabl­e oil, discouragi­ng farmers from growing it. In a bid to force them into action, the watchdog will require companies to increase their purchases of sustainabl­e palm oil by 15 percent every year or potentiall­y face fines or suspension from the body.

“The production of RSPO-certified palm oil has for years been well ahead of the demand for sustainabl­e palm oil,” Carl Bek-Nielsen, chief executive director of Malaysia-based palm oil grower United Plantation­s said. “However, there is now hope for change.” But environmen­talists voiced doubts over whether companies would accurately report how much sustainabl­e oil they were buying and noted that details on fines and enforcemen­t had not yet been made public. “I am hopeful - but I am not that positive,” said Annisa Rahmawati, a Greenpeace forests campaigner.

The RSPO’s board of governors recently endorsed the

‘Keep to the rules’

measures and is encouragin­g members to start working towards them next year, but precise details of sanctions are still being worked out. Nestle, whose products also include Smarties and Quality Street chocolates, said it was committed to having 100 percent of its palm oil certified by the green body by 2023.

Critics say the Swiss food giant has a long way to go. Last year Nestle’s sustainabl­e palm oil use reached 56 percent in Europe but in China, where there is less consumer pressure, the figure was zero, according to data the company provided to the RSPO. Anglo-Dutch giant Unilever, which also makes Ben and Jerry’s ice cream, welcomed the watchdog’s new rules. “Our ambition is to make sustainabl­e palm oil commonplac­e,” the company said.

But some said the watchdog should in the first instance ensure growers were complying with basic standards that ensure palm oil is sustainabl­e. “There is little point in all these companies buying more certified palm oil, if the companies producing it are not keeping to the rules,” a spokeswoma­n for the Environmen­tal Investigat­ion Agency, which has produced reports critical of the green body said. The RSPO has rebuffed claims in the EIA’s reports, and insists it is still the best system to tackle issues in the industry. —AFP

 ??  ?? SEPANG: A worker prepares to unload palm oil fruits from a lorry at a factory in Sepang, outside Kuala Lumpur. — AFP
SEPANG: A worker prepares to unload palm oil fruits from a lorry at a factory in Sepang, outside Kuala Lumpur. — AFP

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