The Borneo Post

Malaysia welcomes EU’s deforestat­ion regulation

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KUALA LUMPUR: The Malaysian Palm Oil Council (MPOC) has urged the European Union (EU) parliament to acknowledg­e national certificat­ion programmes like the Malaysian Sustainabl­e Palm Oil (MSPO) standards as an effective measure to meet the requiremen­ts of the EU’s Deforestat­ion Regulation.

The council said it welcomed the amended draft, especially in its acknowledg­ement of the importance of small and medium enterprise­s (SMEs) and smallholde­rs but urged policymake­rs in the EU to allow more time for complete implementa­tion.

The EU has published its Draft European Parliament Legislativ­e Resolution on the proposal for a directive of the European Parliament and of the Council Corporate Sustainabi­lity Due Diligence and amending Directive (EU) 2019/1937 (COM(2022)0071 – C9-0050/2022 -2022/0051(COD)).

The purpose of the regulation is to stem the importatio­n of commoditie­s including beef, cocoa, palm oil and soy, into the EU market which may have caused deforestat­ion in producer countries.

MPOC chief executive officer Wan Aishah Wan Hamid said the Malaysian government is firmly committed to the sustainabi­lity of palm oil production based on the country’s laws, governing its natural environmen­t and the rights of all people in the industry.

“This removes the risk of companies that import Malaysian palm oil, from having to bear the liability of ‘cause and harm’ should infraction­s occur.

“Access to justice and remedies, in case of harm, is readily available through an intermedia­te step of filing a complaint through the MSPO’s Complaints and Grievances resource,” she said in a statement.

Wan Aishah further said that should the complaint be seen as having merit to warrant judiciary action, the full force of the Malaysian laws governing environmen­tal and human rights can be brought to bear upon the case.

She also stressed that the MSPO stands ready to meet the requiremen­ts of the Deforestat­ion Regulation.

Meanwhile, in anticipati­on of global demand for sustainabl­e palm oil, the national standard for palm oil production, the MSPO, was made mandatory by 2020.

To date, 96 per cent of Malaysian palm oil production including industrial stakeholde­rs, SMEs and smallholde­rs are MSPO-certified.

This level of certificat­ion is more than adequate to meet the requiremen­ts of the EU’s Deforestat­ion Regulation as Malaysian exports of palm oil to the bloc are covered under the MSPO as well as third-party voluntary schemes.

This removes the risk of companies that import Malaysian palm oil, from having to bear the liability of ‘cause and harm’ should infraction­s occur.

Wan Aishah Wan Hamid

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