Bangkok Post

Indonesia tries educating palm oil critics

- By Ismira Lutfia Tisnadibra­ta in Jakarta

Indonesia has vowed to continue the fight against what it sees as an unfair global camaign against its palm-oil industry, a key economic driver that generated more than US$17 billion worth of exports in 2016.

Palm oil “faces negative campaigns and discrimina­tion in Europe and the United States”, Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi declared to an audience of foreign ambassador­s on Jan 9. “Indonesia shall not stand by idly.”

Indonesia, she said, was stepping up its efforts to counter anti-palm oil campaigns and to promote sustainabl­e production with all stakeholde­rs including the Council of Palm Oil Producing Countries (CPOPC).

President Joko Widodo raised the issue during the Asean-EU Summit in Manila in early November 2017. He later called on Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak to join him in efforts to overturn discrimina­tory attitudes and policies toward palm oil.

The European Parliament last April called on the European Commission to take measures to phase out by 2020 the use of vegetable oils including palm oil, which it blames as a major cause of deforestat­ion. Of the biofuel imported into the EU, 23% is derived from palm oil and most of it is from Indonesia, it added.

The palm oil industry in Indonesia has also been blamed for rights violations including child labour, as well as pollution from seasonal forest fires set to clear land for plantation­s, and rapid loss of biodiversi­ty and natural habit of endangered species such as the orangutan and the Sumatran tiger.

Greenpeace has criticised the government for being so defensive. As a party to the 2016 Paris climate accord, Indonesia should not view EU policies as detrimenta­l to the industry and the economy, the environmen­tal group said.

“The government should be ashamed that deforestat­ion, forest burning, land grabs and exploitati­ve work systems still occur. Land expansion is also ongoing not just in Sumatra and Kalimantan but it has encroached on forests in Papua,” Ade Komarudin, a forest campaigner with Greenpeace Indonesia, said in a statement.

Citing data from the Ministry of Agricultur­e, Mr Komarudin said palm oil plantation­s had expanded from 8.3 million hectares in 2010 to 12.3 million last year, encroachin­g on more protected forests and peatlands.

The Foreign Ministry has responded with an effort to educate outsiders about the industry and highlight the positive steps being taken. Late last year it staged a threeweek course with a team from Collaborat­ive Research Center 990 (CRC 990), which brings together academics from three Indonesian universiti­es and the University of Göttingen in Germany.

The course participan­ts were researcher­s, business consultant­s, environmen­tal activists, academics and diplomats from Germany, Italy, Colombia, Malaysia and Indonesia. They visited oil palm plantation­s in Jambi and lived for a few days with smallholde­r farmers, who account for 40% out of the country’s producers.

Markus Wolter, the programme officer for agricultur­al commoditie­s and animal husbandry at World Wildlife Fund (WWF) Germany in Berlin, was one of the participan­ts. He said that the course provided an opportunit­y to look into different aspects of palm oil production, and that it was “invaluable” to see and feel how the smallholde­rs work and live.

“It was really good to see how palm oil is improving the livelihood­s of the smallholde­rs,” Mr Wolter told Asia Focus, adding that the experience has deepened his understand­ing of the whole supply chain and how important palm oil is for the economy.

Indonesia is the top palm oil producer in the world with output of 35 million tonnes, 25 million of which is exported. The EU is its second largest export destinatio­n, importing 4.4 million tonnes in 2016, an increase of 3% from 2015.

The industry provides job opportunit­ies for about 3 million people and is the main source of income for many smallholde­rs. Helping them improve their livelihood­s is a key element in the government’s drive to achieve the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, including poverty alleviatio­n and narrowing the developmen­t gap.

Winandriyo Kun Anggianto, a civil servant at the Foreign Ministry who also took part in the programme, told Asia Focus that participan­ts — some of whom had never set foot in Asia let alone visited an oil palm plantation — learned that smallholde­rs in Jambi could earn a net monthly income of around 5 million rupiah ($375) from two hectares of land.

The amount is far higher than the local minimum wage of 2 million rupiah. “They could earn a lot more if they don’t hire daily workers to help them,” he said.

As well, he said, participan­ts were able to see that child labour allegation­s were not always the case on the ground, where children occasional­ly helping their parents in the field is a local custom.

“The children are not formally employed but they lend a hand to their parents, which is normal in their existing social system. They don’t even always do that, just occasional­ly when they are on holiday and out of school hours,” Mr Winandriyo said.

Participan­ts agreed that while there had been some progress in palm oil practices, there was still room for further improvemen­ts, such as stricter law enforcemen­t, he added.

Mr Wolter concurred, saying the government needed strong regulation and enforcemen­t to deter massive deforestat­ion and to foster certificat­ion under the Roundtable on Sustainabl­e Palm Oil (RSPO), considered the global standard for the industry. Companies voluntaril­y apply for RSPO certificat­ion to show their commitment to promote the use of sustainabl­e practices.

He also said that the environmen­t and smallholde­rs would benefit if growers adopted the “enrichment plot” strategy developed by the University of Göttingen. It involves planting six different tree species, including three fruit trees and three trees for timber in between oil palm trees to diversify the plantation and cultivatio­n.

“Palm oil is a product that is used all over the world, so what has to be done now is to make it as sustainabl­e as possible without producing too many greenhouse gases, without deforestat­ion and by avoiding land conflicts,” he said.

The EU Ambassador to Indonesia, Vincent Guerend, told journalist­s in December that as an export market, the EU was very open to Indonesian palm oil as the duties are very low.

“There is a very high level of concern in Europe among consumers about their own consumptio­n patterns and the way they behave as citizens, so there is a very strong expectatio­n in Europe to have a sustainabl­e consumer goods and great respect for sustainabl­e palm oil,” he said.

 ??  ?? ABOVE Trucks carry oil palm fruit along a damaged road in Ogan Komering Ilir in South Sumatra province of Indonesia.
ABOVE Trucks carry oil palm fruit along a damaged road in Ogan Komering Ilir in South Sumatra province of Indonesia.
 ??  ?? BELOW
An aerial view shows an oil palm plantation in South Sumatra province.
BELOW An aerial view shows an oil palm plantation in South Sumatra province.

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