The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Under EU attack, top palm oil producers rethink trade strategy

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JAKARTA/KUALA LUMPUR: Facing a backlash in Europe over palm oil’s environmen­tal toll, the world’s top producers are scrambling to find new markets and even striking unusual barter deals, such as exchanging Sukhoi jets for the edible oil.

The European Union (EU) is the second-largest palm oil export destinatio­n after India for both Malaysia and Indonesia, which dominate production in a global market worth at least US$40 billion.

But palm has come under increasing fire in Europe over its impact on forest destructio­n, encouragin­g producers to look at new markets ranging from Africa to Myanmar.

Threatened by crumbling demand in Europe, the industry is waging a public relations battle and pushing producers to enter more price-sensitive markets, where Indonesia should have an advantage over Malaysia due to its lower production costs.

“Our principle is we will not let go of even one tonne of trade contract or potential demand palm has globally,” Indonesia’s deputy Coordinati­ng Minister for Economic Affairs Musdhalifa­h Machmud told Reuters.

Machmud said palm oil sales were being brought up in “every trade negotiatio­n” Indonesia conducts.

Palm oil is used in thousands of household products, from snack foods to soaps, as well as to make biodiesel.

But the demand boom has spread plantation­s in Indonesia and Malaysia across an area of more than 17 million hectares an area greater than the size of Portugal and Ireland. They are mostly carved out of rainforest­s, which critics say has lead to an increase in the greenhouse gases that warm the planet.

Environmen­tal activists have pressured consumer companies into demanding that their palm suppliers adopt more environmen­tally sustainabl­e forestry practices. But in Europe, politician­s say the industry’s standards on sustainabi­lity do not go far enough.

So far, palm oil sales to the EU have held up. Indonesian exports rose about 40 per cent to 2.7 million tonnes in the first half of 2017 from a year earlier.

Indonesia’s overall palm exports were worth US$18 billion last year, with EU sales accounting for 16 per cent, the Indonesian Palm Oil Associatio­n (GAPKI) said. For Malaysia, the EU made up nearly 13 per cent of exports, government data showed.

Meanwhile, the Malaysian Palm Oil Council (MPOC) says it will increase efforts to diversify into new markets such as Myanmar, the Philippine­s and West Africa regardless of the EU Resolution.

Malaysia’s plantation industries and commoditie­s minister Datuk Seri Mah Siew Keong said in June he met EU commission­ers and members of parliament for talks. The ministry did not respond to a request for further comment.

Malaysia is more reliant on palm oil exports than Indonesia, shipping out more than 90 per cent of its palm oil last year, compared to about 70 per cent in Indonesia.

Production costs in Malaysia are also 10 to 15 per cent higher than in Indonesia, analysts estimate.

“If EU doesn’t take up palm for biodiesel, demand for palm oil globally will fall and prices will be affected on the downside . . . which will impact everyone equally,” said Ivy Ng, regional head of plantation­s research at CIMB Investment Bank.

Europe is particular­ly concerned about the soaring use of oils, including palm, as a biodiesel fuel. Once regarded as a green alternativ­e, an EU-commission­ed report now says it creates more emissions than fossil fuels. — Reuters

France said in July it will reduce the use of palm in biofuels over concerns of ‘imported deforestat­ion’, prompting concerns from Indonesia that other European countries could follow suit.

In Germany, the environmen­t ministry said it will press to amend an EU renewables directive to take account of the study showing “palm oil and soyoil caused, in comparison to other biofuels, very much higher greenhouse gas emissions per energy unit through indirect land use change”.

The European parliament In April voted to phase out unsustaina­ble palm oil by 2020. The resolution endorsed a single Certified Sustainabl­e Palm Oil (CSPO) plan for Europeboun­d palm and other vegetable oil exports to ensure they are produced in an environmen­tally sustainabl­e way.

In addition to environmen­tal damage, the industry has come under fire over frequent reports of land grabs, child labour and harsh working conditions. Some of the annual forest fires that send shrouds of smoke over parts of Southeast Asia have broken out on palm oil concession­s that burn forests to clear land. Indonesian Trade minister Enggartias­to Lukita in May warned his EU counterpar­ts that he might ask Jakarta not to buy Airbus planes in retaliatio­n, the Jakarta Post reported.

GAPKI chairman Joko Supriyono told a United Nations sustainabi­lity meeting in New York last week that Indonesian palm oil plantation governance met internatio­nal standards.

Indonesia is also looking at new palm oil markets in Africa offering barter trades with palm oil. Lukita told reporters on a visit to Nigeria he had proposed to swap palm oil for crude oil.

Indonesia signed a preliminar­y deal last month with Russia’s Rostec to exchange commoditie­s, including palm, as part of a $1.14 billion payment for 11 Sukhoi jets.

Indonesia’s Vegetable Oil Associatio­n executive director Sahat Sinaga said palm oil producers will open a marketing and research company in Russia, aiming to increase exports of 920,000 tonnes in 2016 by four to five per cent per year up to 2023.

The group is also planning to open a storage facility in Pakistan, which imports 1-two million tonnes of palm from Indonesia a year, anticipati­ng further growth in demand.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? MPOC says it will increase efforts to diversify into new markets such as Myanmar, the Philippine­s and West Africa regardless of the EU Resolution.
— Reuters photo MPOC says it will increase efforts to diversify into new markets such as Myanmar, the Philippine­s and West Africa regardless of the EU Resolution.

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