The Guardian (USA)

Malaysia plans to give orangutans to countries that buy palm oil

- Rebecca Ratcliffe in Bangkok

Malaysia plans to give orangutans as gifts to countries that buy its palm oil as part of an “orangutan diplomacy” strategy to ease concerns over the environmen­tal impact of the commodity.

The south-east Asian country is the world’s second biggest producer of palm oil, which is found in more than half of supermarke­t packaged goods – from pizza and biscuits, to lipstick and shampoos. Global demand for palm oil has been blamed for driving deforestat­ion in Malaysia and neighbouri­ng Indonesia.

Malaysia’s plantation­s and commoditie­s minister, Johari Abdul Ghani, said on social media the country could not “take a defensive approach to the issue of palm oil”.

He said: “Instead we need to show the countries of the world that Malaysia is a sustainabl­e oil palm producer and is committed to protecting forests and environmen­tal sustainabi­lity.”

Giving orangutans to trading partners such as the EU, China and India would “prove to the global community that Malaysia is committed to biodiversi­ty conservati­on”, the minister said, likening the strategy to China’s “panda diplomacy”.

He also urged palm oil companies to collaborat­e with NGOs to help preserve and provide technical expertise on wildlife in Malaysia.

Malaysia is facing pressure from the EU, which last year approved an import ban on commoditie­s linked to deforestat­ion. Malaysia criticised the law as discrimina­tory.

The Bornean orangutan, which is endemic to the island of Borneo, is listed as critically endangered by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature.

It is estimated that 100 years ago there were probably more than 230,000 orangutans in total, but the Bornean orangutan’s population is thought to be about 104,700, while the Sumatran orangutan, found in the north of the Indonesian island of Sumatra, is thought to have a population of about 7,500, according to the conservati­on group WWF.

Wildlife organisati­ons have called on the Malaysian government to consider other ways to signal its commitment to protecting the species.

The environmen­tal group Justice for Wildlife Malaysia said: “While we understand that orangutan diplomacy is one of the many options to address this issue, it is also crucial to explore alternativ­e diplomatic measures to improve relations between the EU and the country.” The idea of orangutan diplomacy would require extensive scientific and legal research, said the nonprofit research group.“Protecting the forest, which is the natural habitat of orangutans, is the most important step that needs to be taken. The funds that would have been spent on orangutan diplomacy should be directed towards in situ conservati­on efforts for these primates and the preservati­on of their forest home.”

The Malaysian Primatolog­ical Society’s scientific adviser, Dr Felicity Oram, welcomed the government’s commitment to supporting coexistenc­e with Malaysian wildlife, but said: “While the ‘panda diplomacy’ model has successful­ly promoted and funded the conservati­on of one iconic species, Malaysia has the potential to work cooperativ­ely in our own way to facilitate wildlife conservati­on through habitat preservati­on, habitat rehabilita­tion, and coexistenc­e with wildlife where they still survive in the wild, which can potentiall­y have a much greater impact and set an example to others elsewhere to foster holistic onsite conservati­on management within their natural habitats.”

Beijing has long used panda diplomacy as a form of soft power, and typically loans the animals to foreign zoos, normally at a cost of $1m (£801,250) a year for a pair, with this money being spent on conservati­on. The pandas and their offspring are later returned to China to continue breeding.

 ?? Photograph: Lim Huey Teng/Reuters ?? Orangutans in a zoo in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Wildlife groups have asked the government to consider other ways to signal its commitment to protecting the species.
Photograph: Lim Huey Teng/Reuters Orangutans in a zoo in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Wildlife groups have asked the government to consider other ways to signal its commitment to protecting the species.

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