The Star Malaysia - Star2

Can insects help boost palm oil’s image?

- By THIN LEI WIN

A PIONEERING entreprene­ur believes insects can help improve the reputation of the palm oil industry, which for years has been accused of causing widespread deforestat­ion, while slashing commercial farming’s voracious water use.

Patrick Crowley, founder of Chapul, the first insect protein foods company in the United States, is proposing a “circular economy” for palm oil farmers so that waste and byproducts are used for farming insects on plantation­s.

“The problem is the human behaviour of clearing rainforest­s and peat bogs. It’s not palm. It’s the practice. That’s how I see it,” Crowley told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Palm oil is the world’s most widely used edible oil, found in everything from margarine to soap, but has faced scrutiny in recent years from green groups and consumers, who have blamed its production for forest loss, fires and worker exploitati­on.

Crowley’s insect plan, already being piloted for four years in Indonesia, the world’s biggest palm oil producer, involves using empty palm fruit bunches that are often burned or left to rot after being processed.

This waste has little or no market value but is high in fibre, the 40-year-old former hydrologis­t-turned-ceo said on the sidelines of a conference in Dubai on food production in areas with poor soils and water scarcity.

Natural fungi and bacteria are added to this palm fruit waste to start the fermentati­on process, increasing its protein content and making it more digestible for insects, he said.

Black soldier flies, which are good at converting waste into protein, are given this waste just once before they are then ready to be harvested and fed to farmed fish, probably the world’s fastest growing food-producing sector.

Such insects replace fish meal, which is becoming increasing­ly scarce and expensive, and palm plantation­s are attractive because they provide “the largest concentrat­ion of homogenous waste” that can be converted into feed with consistent quality, said Crowley.

Scientists say insect waste, known as frass, is also a great natural fertiliser and can go back into plantation­s to help boost palm yields, Crowley said.

“We’re already seeing an increase in productivi­ty and decrease in use of pesticides in our pilot,” he said.

Crowley was looking at ways to cut agricultur­e’s water usage – 70% of the world’s freshwater is currently used for farming – when watching a TED talk on insects made him “a reluctant entreprene­ur”.

He used crowdfundi­ng to set up Chapul – the Aztec word for grasshoppe­r – a year before the United Nations’ Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO) published a report on insects.

The agency highlighte­d that they emit fewer greenhouse gases and less ammonia than cattle or pigs, require less land and water – and there are more than 1,900 edible insect species.

Crowley said a consortium of partners bought land on Sumatra island to scale up their 2,000sq m pilot facility into five farms of 5ha each.

These farms would use a total of one million tonnes of waste per year, produce 200,000 tonnes of larvae, and save 20 million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions, he added.

Eduardo Mansur, director of land and water division at the FAO, said it is not only important but also necessary to transform the economic systems into circular models.

“Is it possible to do it at once in all sectors? No, but we have to start where we can and agricultur­e sector, especially water in agricultur­e, offers a lot of opportunit­ies” he said.

“But we have to do it at a scale that will have positive impact to the planet.” – Thomson Reuters Foundation

 ?? — Reuters ?? Palm oil is the world’s most widely used edible oil.
— Reuters Palm oil is the world’s most widely used edible oil.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia