The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Policy to save forests may kill jobs

EU’s mandate to end deforestat­ion hailed and assailed.

- Patricia Cohen c. 2024 The New York Times

KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA — The European Union’s upcoming ban on imports linked to deforestat­ion has been hailed as a “gold standard” in climate policy: a meaningful step to protect the world’s forests, which help remove planet-killing greenhouse gases from the atmosphere.

The law requires traders to trace the origins of a head-spinning variety of products — beef and books, chocolate and charcoal, lipstick and leather. To the European Union, the mandate, set to take effect next year, is a testament to the bloc’s role as a global leader on climate change.

The policy, though, has gotten caught in fierce crosscurre­nts about how to navigate the economic and political trade-offs demanded by climate change in a world where power is shifting and internatio­nal institutio­ns are fracturing.

Developing countries have expressed outrage — with Malaysia and Indonesia among the most vocal. Together, the two nations supply 85% of the world’s palm oil, one of seven critical commoditie­s covered by the European Union’s ban. And they maintain that the law puts their economies at risk.

In their eyes, rich, technologi­cally advanced countries — and former colonial powers — are yet again dictating terms and changing the rules of trade when it suits them. “Regulatory imperialis­m,” Indonesia’s economic minister declared. The view fits with complaints from developing countries that the reigning internatio­nal order neglects their concerns.

The palm oil dispute also encapsulat­es a central tension in the economics of climate change: the argument that lower- and middle-income nations are being compelled to bear the cost of ruinous environmen­tal shifts caused mostly by the world’s wealthiest nations.

“We’re not questionin­g the need to fight deforestat­ion,” said Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad, Malaysia’s environmen­t minister. “But it’s not fair when countries that have deforested their own land for centuries, or are responsibl­e for much of our deforestat­ion, can unilateral­ly impose conditions on us.”

In addition, many government officials, industry representa­tives and farmers contend that the European Union’s rules are really a form of economic protection­ism, a way to shield European farmers who grow competing oilseed crops like rapeseed or soybeans.

The European Union’s law, which was passed last year, bars products that use palm oil and other commoditie­s like rubber and wood that come from forestland that was converted to agricultur­e after 2020.

Proving compliance could turn out to be complex and expensive for vast numbers of small suppliers.

In Malaysia and Indonesia, the prime minister and president said the livelihood­s of their citizens were threatened.

They jointly vowed to combat what they called “highly detrimenta­l discrimina­tory measures against palm oil.”

The concerns have been echoed by anti-poverty advocates and even some environmen­talists.

“A lot of people are going to be caught flat-footed when this kicks in next year,” said Pamela Coke-Hamilton, executive director of the Internatio­nal Trade Center, a United Nations agency created to help poor countries build wealth through trade.

Most small farmers don’t even know about the looming ban, let alone how to prove their compliance, Coke-Hamilton said.

In a week of interviews with The New York Times at plantation­s in the Malaysian state of Sabah on the island of Borneo, not a single small farmer had heard of the deforestat­ion rules.

“They’re going to get kicked out of the market,” which could further harm the environmen­t, Coke-Hamilton said. “We know deforestat­ion is linked to poverty.”

Endless rows of oil palms

The Chinese New Year was a national holiday in Malaysia, but Awang Suang, 77, had been up since dawn, carrying a roaring engine on his back and swinging a hand-held grass cutter around the oil palm trees on his plantation.

“Plantation” is a bit grand to describe the small overgrown plot in Membakut in Sabah that Awang farms mostly on his own. His holdings amount to 12 acres.

He has been cultivatin­g oil palms for more than 50 years after switching from rubber trees. Palms require less labor and produce more frequent harvests — roughly every two weeks, year round — providing a steadier income, he explained.

The work in Borneo’s humid equatorial heat is exhausting. For tall palms, farmers like Awang maneuver an extendable pole with a scythe on the end to slice through spiny 50-pound bunches cradled at the top of the trunk. Then they must carry or cart the fallen fruit to a road.

In a good month, Awang said, he can grow about 8 tons of fruit.

Later, over sweet milky tea in a living room lined with six overstuffe­d, regal-style couches, Awang explained that most property owners he knew grew oil palms. Many supplement their income by raising goats, fishing, contractin­g work or doing government jobs.

In recent decades, the world’s appetite for the viscous red oil has exploded. Roughly half the products on supermarke­t shelves contain palm oil.

The bulk of it comes from multibilli­on-dollar corporatio­ns, which have gulped up miles and miles of land.

Across Sabah, oil palms stretch as far as the eye can see. The landscape is picturesqu­e. But compared with the riotous diversity of a rainforest, the columns — like brigades of upright feather dusters — can become as monotonous as elevator music.

Smallholde­rs — defined in Malaysia as farmers who own fewer than 40 hectares, or nearly 100 acres — grow 27% of the country’s oil palms.

The palm oil gold rush has helped reduce rural poverty, build wealth from exports and create jobs. Roughly 4.5 million people in Malaysia and Indonesia work in the industry, according to the World Economic Forum.

For a while the oil was even promoted as environmen­tally friendly, a “supercrop.” One acre can produce four to 10 times as much oil as the same area of soybeans, rapeseed or sunflowers.

But environmen­tal benefits accrue only if existing cropland is converted to oil palms. Instead, producers clear-cut or burned pristine rainforest­s and peatlands to make way for crops. The eliminatio­n of these precious carbon sinks released titanic amounts of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, unleashing an environmen­tal catastroph­e.

Malaysia lost nearly onefifth of its primary tropical forest between 2001 and 2022, according to the World Resources Institute. Habitats for thousands of species, including orangutans, sun bears and pygmy elephants, were destroyed, putting some animals in danger of extinction.

Environmen­tal watchdogs like the World Wildlife Fund and a wide range of industry players and multinatio­nals teamed up in 2004 to create the Roundtable on Sustainabl­e Palm Oil, a voluntary organizati­on that set standards to reduce destructiv­e practices.

But critics maintain that while there have been improvemen­ts, voluntary agreements alone could not preserve and restore the world’s forests. A report from the European Parliament concluded in 2020 that self-policing “should only be complement­ary to binding measures.”

The European Union introduced exactly that. To ensure that any product sold in the 27 countries of the bloc could be traced back to its source, the legislatio­n demands that nearly all producers who cultivate palm oil, coffee, cocoa, cattle, soybeans, rubber and wood map the precise borders of their farmland to show that the commoditie­s are not linked to deforestat­ion. Tracing each fat, acorn-shaped bunch of fruit to a small farm in remote areas is much more complicate­d than lawmakers in Brussels realize, smallholde­r groups say.

Hard-to-trace sources

Smallholde­rs mostly sell to traders, dealers and collectors — layer upon layer of middlemen who end up mixing together bunches of palm oil fruit from hundreds of plantation­s.

Tracing is further complicate­d because the dealer, wary of competitio­n, “doesn’t want to tell the mill where all his suppliers come from,” said Reza Azmi, executive director of Wild Asia, a nonprofit based in Malaysia that works with smallholde­rs to improve environmen­tal practices.

Smaller independen­t producers and traders could get squeezed out.

“What we’re hearing in Sabah,” Azmi said, “is that independen­t mills are looking to sell to big corporate guys because they don’t have resources to make sure of compliance.”

 ?? JES AZNAR/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A Malaysian plantation worker hauls a trailer full of palm fruits. Malaysia and Indonesia supply 85% of the world’s palm oil, one of seven critical commoditie­s covered by Europe’s upcoming ban on imports linked to deforestat­ion.
JES AZNAR/THE NEW YORK TIMES A Malaysian plantation worker hauls a trailer full of palm fruits. Malaysia and Indonesia supply 85% of the world’s palm oil, one of seven critical commoditie­s covered by Europe’s upcoming ban on imports linked to deforestat­ion.

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