Taranaki Daily News

How palm oil permeates our weekly shop

- JOE SHUTE

Last November, the managing director of British supermarke­t chain Iceland made a visit to the Kalimantan rainforest­s in Borneo. Richard Walker, whose parents founded the frozen food firm in 1970, says he wanted to see the impact of the palm oil industry at first hand.

The 37-year-old recalls encounteri­ng a ‘‘horizon to horizon monocultur­e’’ of palm trees where pristine rainforest once stood. Illegal deforestat­ion and draining of peat bogs were further expanding the plantation­s, which manufactur­e an oil now used in a staggering 50 per cent of all supermarke­t products, from the cereal to the soap aisle.

Walker’s conclusion was stark: ‘‘I do not believe such a thing as sustainabl­e palm oil exists.’’

Following that trip, Iceland announced it will be removing palm oil from all of its own-brand products by the end of 2018 (replacing it with other vegetable oils). It is a move which will cost the company around £5 million ($NZ9.6m), but Walker insists it is the right one.

Walker says there is a moral imperative to act: ‘‘We have this great oil which is being used and abused and put into everything, and it is just not right.’’

According to Walker, once informed about palm oil and its effects on the environmen­t, 85 per cent of its customers supported a decision to remove palm oils altogether.

But how can we all reduce our reliance on palm oil, 62 million tons of which were consumed globally in 2015 – a figure set to double by 2050? Everyday items from biscuits and bread to shampoo and washing detergents rely on vast amounts of palm oil.

Palm trees are native to the forests of West and Central Africa, where indigenous communitie­s have relied on the oil for food, medicine and manufactur­ing products for centuries, but its use has exploded in recent decades as the lubricant of the global production chain.

Swathes of rainforest amassing some 6-10 million hectares have been cleared across south-east Asia to accommodat­e vast plantation­s.

Such sustained habitat loss has had disastrous impacts on animal population­s – orangutans and Sumatran rhinos, elephants and tigers, which rely on the habitats being destroyed by palm oil plantation­s, are now listed as critically endangered.

This impact on biodiversi­ty has been exacerbate­d by the draining and burning of peat bogs on which the rainforest stands, releasing vast amounts of carbon into the atmosphere.

‘‘It is a double-whammy effect,’’ says Simon Counsell, director of Rainforest Foundation UK. ‘‘Essentiall­y pretty much any wildlife living in the forest will have lost their habitat under these carpets of palm oil plantation­s.’’

An associatio­n of industry and NGO members has been working together since 2004 under the auspices of a Roundtable on Sustainabl­e Palm Oil (RSPO) to improve the sustainabi­lity of palm oil production.

However, critics claim this has done little to halt the environmen­tal destructio­n. And while there is now a legal requiremen­t to display palm oil in products, the abundance and myriad uses for the ingredient means it can often be obscured under as many as 200 different names; palm kernel oil, palm fruit oil, hydrogenat­ed palm glycerides, sodium kernelate and Elaeis guineensis are some of many examples.

‘‘The problem is there are many derivative­s of palm oil,’’ Counsell says. ‘‘It’s become a highly pervasive ingredient. Very often it’s impossible to recognise which products it is in.’’

Products that use palm oil

❚ Cosmetics: Palm oil and its derivative­s lurk in an astounding

70 per cent of global cosmetics, where they serve as emulsifier­s and surfactant­s. Lipsticks rely on palm oil as it holds colour well, doesn’t melt at high temperatur­e and has virtually no taste.

❚ Soap and shampoo: Palm oil is used as a conditioni­ng agent in shampoo. Unilever, which buys more palm oil than most other consumer-goods conglomera­tes, for use in products like Dove soap and Pond’s cold cream, recently committed to tracing its entire supply to sustainabl­e sources by

2019. There are other companies too, such as L’Oreal, that also pledged to follow suit.

❚ Bread: Palm oil is widely used to make bread due to its solidity at room temperatur­e, making it cheap and easy to bake with on a large scale.

❚ Ready meals: Among Iceland’s palm oil offenders – from which they have already removed it or are in the process of doing so – were ready meals such as luxury chicken makhani masala, chicken stew and dumplings and its luxury beef wellington. Palm oil forms 20 per cent of the weight of a packet of instant noodles. It is also added to frozen pizza dough.

❚ Chocolate: Palm oil is used to create its smooth and shiny exterior. Last October Nestle, Mars and Hershey were accused of breaking pledges to stop using ‘‘conflict palm oil’’ from deforested Indonesian jungles. The firms say they have committed to improving its traceabili­ty.

❚ Washing detergent: Palm oil is refined to create soap, washing powder and other cleaning products. Studies have recorded palm oil in 30-40 per cent of cleaning products.

❚ Puddings: A vast array of puddings and desserts rely on palm oil. Among the list of products Iceland says it has removed palm oil from, or will do so by the end of 2018, are fruit mince pies and Bramley apple pie. Palm oil is used in icecream to make it smooth and creamy, and in mass-produced biscuits. - The Telegraph

 ?? 123RF ?? Palm oil is now used in a staggering 50 per cent of all supermarke­t products, from cereals to soap.
123RF Palm oil is now used in a staggering 50 per cent of all supermarke­t products, from cereals to soap.

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