The Sun (Malaysia)

Firms agree to close Ketapang case

> IOI and Aidenviron­ment reach understand­ing, no further standing issues

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PETALING JAYA: IOI Group and sustainabi­lity consultant Aidenviron­ment have mutually agreed to close the Ketapang complaint case, which led to a temporary suspension of IOI’s Roundtable on Sustainabl­e Palm Oil’s (RSPO) certificat­ion earlier this year.

“Aidenviron­ment has raised all other matters with IOI for perusal and declares that it has no further standing issues with IOI related to the Ketapang case. The above declaratio­n has been achieved with IOI Group, independen­t of RSPO decisions,” both parties said in a joint statement last Friday. The complaint case filed by Aidenviron­ment alleged deforestat­ion in IOI concession­s in Ketapang, West Kalimantan.

The closure of the case follows Aidenviron­ment’s verificati­on visit at IOI’s plantation developmen­t in Ketapang from Sept 2 till Sept 5, 2016. The two parties said the final three issues raised in Aidenviron­ment’s complaint have been settled.

Aidenviron­ment previously said the final resolution of the complaint hinged on IOI commencing the removal of all overplante­d oil palms, upon confirmati­on of the local government order to do so by November 2009. The removal includes all plantings thereafter.

In terms of overplanti­ng, IOI said PT BNS will immediatel­y abandon 434ha of land, which was cleared and planted between 2010 and 2014. The move is in line with an instructio­n issued by the Ministry of Environmen­t and Forestry of Indonesia.

To recap, IOI received a letter from the ministry in October 2016 stating a change from non-forestry land to forestry land in December 2013.

Following a re-survey, it was confirmed in September 2014 that out of a total area of 11,800ha applied for by PT BNS, there was an overlap with Danau Manis Mata Production Forest amounting to 1,638ha.

Aidenviron­ment and IOI’s joint analysis subsequent­ly confirmed that the overlap comprise of 1,204ha (723ha of oil palm plantation­s and 481ha of other land), which was abandoned in 2011 and another 434ha of land, cleared and planted between 2010 and 2014, was still managed by PT BNS during the joint field visit in September 2016.

PT BNS will abandon the 434ha until such a time as there are new ministeria­l instructio­ns regarding the said land.

In terms of RSPO new planting procedures (NPP), a joint analysis of the chronology of land developmen­t confirmed that land developmen­t in PT SKS and PT BNS, which began in 2009, had straddled the RSPO NPP’s cut-off date of Jan 1, 2010.

“Therefore, IOI was required by RSPO to only comply with ‘on-going planting’ NPPs. IOI agrees with Aidenviron­ment that had we been required to follow the full NPP requiremen­ts, it would likely have revealed, at a much earlier stage, the non-compliance­s occurring at that time,” said IOI.

In addition, it said it will not market the palm oil produced from PT BNS and the affected areas of PT SKS with the RSPO certificat­ion claims for the duration of one planting cycle, although it will still certify PT BNS and SKS under the RSPO time-bound plan.

“IOI regrets not having taken necessary actions to be in full compliance with RSPO’s rules at all times. In view of the company’s commitment to break with the past, IOI agrees to settle the outstandin­g issues with Aidenviron­ment,” it said.

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