Palm Oil – The Green Development Oil Newsletter
World Growth
9 November 2012
Palm Oil –
The Green Development Oil Newsletter
Issue 25, November
2012
Proposed French palm oil tax likely to push
up prices, breach WTO and harm smallholders
A French
Socialist Senator has introduced an amendment that would levy a tax on palm
oil coming into France on the grounds it is harmful to human
health. The tax proposed would increase the cost of
cosmetics and baked goods, most likely breaches France's
obligations as a member of the World Trade Organization, and
makes producers of palm oil in developing countries,
particularly smallholders in Asia and Africa, uncompetitive
in the French market.
US EPA visits palm oil producers in SE
Asia
The US Government’s Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) recently concluded a visit to Indonesia and
Malaysia this week as part of their review of an assessment
whether to allow palm oil derived biofuels to be recognized
under the United States' renewable fuel standard. The review
came after the Obama Administration asked the EPA to review
the assessment and to make a site visit to the two largest
palm oil producing countries.
Draft Malaysian Sustainable Palm Oil
standard published
A draft of the Malaysian
Sustainable Palm Oil (MSPO) standard has been published for public
consultation. The standard appears to be developed by a
standards development organization recognized by the
Malaysian standards authority. According to media reports, the MSPO standard has been
under development for several years, and has been developed
through consultation with a range of stakeholders.
FAO finds RSPO certification unsuitable for
small farmers
Smallholders in Thailand recently
achieved certification under the RSPO, marking a first for
independent smallholders in the RSPO system. The Secretary
General of the RSPO has commended these efforts, arguing that the benefits smallholders
derive from certification outweigh the costs incurred.
However an FAO commissioned case study found that there is
simply not enough of an incentive for small farmers to grow
certified palm oil.
African palm oil farmers undermined by
French retailers
The Inter-professional Association
of Oil Palm Industry (AIPH) of Cote d'Ivoire has brought a
legal complaint before the Tribunal de Commerce de Paris
against System U for running a campaign against palm oil.
The complaint has been supported by a group of African
economists and businesses, who have criticized several
French companies for running a campaign detrimental to
economic development on the continent.
UK Government policy heavily influenced by
greens
The UK Government’s Department for
Environment Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) published a
statement on the ‘sustainable production of palm oil’.
The statement includes a government procurement pledge,
asserting that “the United Kingdom is working towards
achieving 100% sourcing of credibly certified sustainable
palm oil by the end of 2015”.
Proposed French palm
oil tax likely to push up prices, breach WTO and harm
smallholders
A French Socialist Senator has introduced an
amendment that would levy a tax on palm
oil coming into France on the grounds it is harmful to human
health. The tax proposed would increase the cost of
cosmetics and baked goods, most likely breaches France's
obligations as a member of the World Trade Organization, and
makes producers of palm oil in developing countries,
particularly smallholders in Asia and Africa, uncompetitive
in the French market.
The measure appears to reflect
pressure from French producers of oil seeds objecting to
imports, particularly the sunflower industry.
The
amendment was introduced as part of the 'Social Security
Finance Act' currently being considered in the French
Senate. It calls for a tax of 300EUR per tonne to be placed
on palm oil, coconut oil, and palm kernel oil including on
imported or processed foods that contain palm oil.
It is
likely that the Finance Ministry will endorse the amendment,
though this has not yet been confirmed. If the Finance
Ministry does endorse the Amendment, it is more likely to be
accepted in the final vote of the French Parliament.
The
Senator who introduced the amendment represents the region
of Picardy, in the North-East of France. The region is a hub
for France’s agricultural industries. Almost 1 billion
Euro worth of cereals, including sunflower seeds, are
produced in the region annually.
Presumably the
contention is that a tax on imported palm oil would help
boost this sector by providing financial incentive to French
food processors to use vegetable oil refined from locally
grown crops instead of cheaper imported palm oil.
This
is unlikely to work. Palm oil has qualities most others do
not which is why it used extensively in the baked goods and
cosmetic industries, although not in great quantities. The
proposed tax would probably just increase the cost of those
products.
The proposed change is based on factually
incorrect claims that palm oil is an unhealthy vegetable
oil. Palm oil has a number of beneficial nutritional qualities and is
regarded as a relatively healthy vegetable oil option.
Importantly, it is widely recognized as a healthy
alternative to trans-fats often used in food processing.
The amendment asserts it is justified on health grounds.
The rules in WTO Agreements permit restrictions of imports
if there is a threat to human health. To justify use of
that measure, there has to be scientific evidence of harm to
human health and a formal, technically-based risk
assessment. There is no evidence in the legislative
measures those conditions have been met.
Increasing the
price of goods containing palm oil would be detrimental to
smallholders in developing countries. According to news reports, the French campaign has already
“led to a major uproar among oil palm smallholders
worldwide.”
African smallholders are pushing back, calling for several French
retail chains and food companies to end their campaigns
against palm oil. In Malaysia, smallholder sentiment is
flaring with around half a million growers reportedly
frustrated with moves in France to label products without
palm oil.
Malaysian Government officials have also
expressed concern over the French campaign. After Malaysian
statistics indicated that no Malaysian palm oil exports
entered France in February, May, July, August and September
of 2012, Plantation Industries and Commodities Minister Tan
Sri Bernard Dompok reportedly announced that his ministry
would set up a committee to assist local palm oil producers
gain access into the French market.
This was initially
envisioned by some stakeholders as the purview of the RSPO.
But the RSPO has been unable or unwilling to assist
smallholders gain access into the French market. According
to media reports, the RSPO has been criticized
for pursuing an agenda to certify smallholders, rather than
supporting and promoting palm oil products in consuming
countries.
US EPA visits palm oil producers in SE
Asia
The US Government’s Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) recently concluded a visit to Indonesia and
Malaysia this week as part of their review of an assessment
whether to allow palm oil derived biofuels to be recognized
under the United States' renewable fuel standard.
In
January 2012, the EPA released an assessment of lifecycle
greenhouse gas emission benefits from biofuels derived from
imported palm oil. A World Growth sponsored submission from Sonecon, a consultancy
run by a former senior economic official in the Clinton
Administration, Dr Robert Shapiro, found the EPA rating for
palm oil imports relied on speculative assumptions and could
not substantiated.
Following complaints by Indonesia
during the recent APEC Summit in Russia that palm oil was
not treated as sustainable, the Obama Administration
committed the EPA to visit the two largest palm oil
producing countries (Indonesia and Malaysia) as part of its
review of the EPA assessment. The EPA assessment comes
after a personal request by Indonesian President, Susilo
Bambang Yudhoyono, to Secretary Clinton, to revisit palm oil
eligibility under the US renewable fuel standard. This is a
wise move. Biodiesel from palm oil is a cost effective and
sustainable renewable energy source. Major palm oil
producing countries are also significant trading partners.
The US Administration appear as well to appreciate that
WTO rules do not allow the EPA to set a carbon emission
standard for producers in one country which would be
different to that applied in the US or a third country.
The EU has done this. Several countries are likely to
challenge it in the WTO, with persistent rumours that a case
will soon be filed, and the US mission in Brussels engaging
in the issue. It appears that the US Soybean industry is
pressing the Obama Administration to challenge the EU
regulation on the basis that it discriminates against
imports of US soy-bean based products.
The Obama
Administration is likely aware of the irony of challenging
the EU in the WTO, only to find the EPA is proposing
introduction of a similar measure in the US.
Meanwhile,
environmental NGOs including WWF and the Union of Concerned
Scientists, an alter ego for Greenpeace, continue to
denigrate palm oil and lobby for its exclusion under the
renewable fuel standard, on the basis of unsubstantiated
data and emissions ratings. The NGOs have rallied against palm oil by claiming that the
crop drives forest conversion, which supersedes the
environmental benefits derived from using biofuels.
WWF’s ongoing criticism of the palm oil industry may
come as a surprise to some, given that RSPO is much a WWF
conception. But it is no surprise to those who realize the
strategies are two sides of the same coin – attacking palm
oil while using the RSPO system to ramp up obligations on
palm oil producers that will limit expansion of the
industry.
It is not yet clear how the EPA will rule, but
under the current management, it is expected it will lean to
the WWF/Greenpeace position. This is a mistake, if the US
is serious about engaging South-East Asia, fostering trade
ties, and developing allies in the region. Rejecting
Malaysia and Indonesian palm oil, a key sector for millions
in the region, is no way to achieve these goals. At the same
time, China, a major palm oil importing country, is looking
to increase influence in the region, and will potentially
seize any missed US diplomatic opportunities by purchasing
large quantities of palm oil if the EPA rejects it based on
radical green ideals. Realists in the Democratic Party
should be concerned.
Draft Malaysian Sustainable
Palm Oil standard published
A draft of the Malaysian
Sustainable Palm Oil (MSPO) standard has been published for public
consultation. The standard appears to be developed by a
standards development organization recognized by the
Malaysian standards authority.
According to media reports the MSPO standard has been under
development since last year and has been developed through
consultation with a range of stakeholders.
In its current
draft, the standard covers a rage of areas with principles
and criteria requiring:
- overarching management
policy;
- internal audits and management
reviews;
- requirements for continual
improvement;
- transparency requirements;
-
compliance with legal requirements including tenure and
customary rights;
- provisions for social
responsibility, health, safety and employment conditions;
- reductions of pollution and emissions;
-
water resource and biodiversity management;
-
implementation of best practice agricultural procedures; and
- a number of restrictions on new plantation
developments.
It is a very healthy development. With the
development of this standard and the implementation of an
Indonesian standard (although that is in the form of a
compulsory Government regulation), this creates competition
in the certification world. Until now, the only system-wide
certification of sustainability was the RSPO scheme.
This
now gives options to producers and businesses to demonstrate
sustainability. It enables them to compare the terms of RSPO
standards, and changes proposed to them, with the terms of
other standards.
It also alleviates the concerns of
producers and buyers that adoption by dominant operators in
the supply chain, such as consumer goods producers or
retailers, of a single sustainability standard, like those
developed by WWF, may result in those entities exercising a
monopolistic role in the market and start dictating the
terms of supply to producers and the availability of
products to consumers.
In this respect it is important
to note that WWF has stated that its ambition with
certifications systems is to use them to control the supply
chain in important food products. WWF is unlikely to support
MSPO. They campaigned against a similar national
certification initiative to develop a sustainable palm oil
scheme in Indonesia. National standards developed through
International Organisation for Standardisation (ISO)
mechanisms represent international best practice in
standards and conformance. But WWF view them as competitors
with the certification schemes they helped established and
continue to influence.
The MSPO standard is still in its
infancy, but Malaysia should be working to improve the
viability and foreign recognition of the certification
scheme. France would be a good start, where a campaign
against palm oil is aggressive and spurious. It is important
that Malaysia engage France in order to secure the support
and adoption of MSPO as a legitimate tool to demonstrate
sustainability and environmental compliance.
FAO
finds RSPO certification unsuitable for small
farmers
Smallholders in Thailand recently achieved
certification under the RSPO, marking a first for
independent smallholders in the RSPO system. The Secretary
General of the RSPO has commended these efforts, arguing that the benefits smallholders
derive from certification outweigh the costs incurred.
A
FAO-commissioned assessment of the Thailand project
indicates this is not the case. The case study found that without external
funding, farmers would have been unable to pursue
certification. The project was paid for by overseas donors.
No other independent smallholders have achieved
certification, most likely because costs are inhibitive;
there are too many technical and administrative obstacles
while small-scale farmers often lack capacity to achieve
certification by their own means.
The authors identify a
range of certification costs and technical challenges,
concluding that "the benefits of certification alone are too
low and the challenges for smallholders are too high to
successfully proceed with certification".
The FAO
publication estimated costs of almost US$50 000 to certify
less than 1800 ha of plantation in the first year of
certification alone.
The study also indicated that the
meagre premium offered for certified palm oil does not
reflect the high costs associated with achieving
certification. The report noted that Thai smallholders could
expect to receive only US$0.0003 per kg of fresh fruit
bunches, based on the price paid for GreenPalm certificates.
This figure is too small to incentivise farmers to pursue
costly certification.
With insubstantial returns on
certificates and weak incentives for small-scale farmers to
peruse certification, the viability of the RSPO system is
being called into question.
Meanwhile certified
independent small-scale farmers in Thailand may feel cheated
- the aid funding that assisted them could have been better
spent on improving agricultural practices and training in
farm management. The FAO research shows this is what they
really wanted when they signed onto the project.
Advancements in achieving these goals were only indirect
results of the certification project.
Improving
environmental outputs and increasing productivity should be
key priorities for overseas aid investment in developing
countries. Certification consultants and auditors are the
real winners from such ‘development’ projects.
NGOs
are comfortable lobbying for certification of smallholders
in developing countries. Would they similarly campaign for
US small farmers in Illinois or Missouri to certify their
100 acres of corn? The NGOs strategy of demanding
smallholders pursue certification would cause uproar if
applied to America, European or Australia family farmers.
Small scale farmers throughout the world already face
serious economic challenges, without demands for
certification that would further decrease their
competitiveness.
African palm oil farmers
undermined by French retailers
The Inter-professional
Association of Oil Palm Industry (AIPH) of Cote d'Ivoire has
brought a legal complaint before the Tribunal de Commerce de
Paris against System U for running a campaign against palm
oil. The complaint has been supported by a group of African
economists and businesses, who have criticized several
French companies for running a campaign detrimental to
economic development on the continent.
Nigerian based
policy think tank - the Initiative for Public Policy
Analysis (IPPA) - and several leading African economists wrote to the chief executives of Casino,
System U, Jacquet and Lays, requesting an end to an
anti-palm oil campaigns being run in France.
According to
the letter, the French retailers have been “engaged in a
slanderous and reprehensible campaign against small palm oil
farmers in Africa, Asia and Latin America [and] caused a
drop in their income, disparaged their livelihood, and
unfairly damaged the reputation of the crop they grow”.
The IPPA accuse the French companies of “colonial
behavior” having a harmful effect on small farmers’
livelihoods and standards of living.
The letter claims
that “main beneficiaries of your campaign are likely to be
sunflower producers in Russia and the French rapeseed
industry... [P]alm oil is a healthy, natural, low-cost oil
which uses less land than any competing product. It raises
incomes for small farmers in Africa and Asia; and it lowers
prices for consumers in France."
Recent World Growth
research has highlighted the significant role smallholders
play in the palm oil industry in South-East Asia, and the
economic and social benefits to small scale growers from
participation in the industry.
With failing development
indicators throughout much of the continent, the palm oil
industry offers significant opportunities for low income
African farmers. According to the IPPA one of the major
obstacles to development appears to be European campaigns,
particularly those in France, run at the expense of African
development.
UK Government policy heavily influenced
by Greens
The UK Government’s Department for
Environment Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) published a
statement on the ‘sustainable production of palm oil’
which includes a government procurement pledge, that “the
United Kingdom is working towards achieving 100% sourcing of
credibly certified sustainable palm oil by the end of
2015”.This is an unusual political action for a Department
of State. For a start the Government is not a significant
purchaser of Palm Oil. It is advocating WWF policy. WWF is
co signatory of the Statement.
DEFRA would not normally
set UK Government procurement policy, nor set policy which
governs how businesses should source products
Procurement
policies that recognize sustainably production should be
based on robust assessments of sustainability certification
schemes. The UK Government established a body to assess
certification schemes for the UK timber procurement policy,
known as the Central Point of Expertise for Timber
Procurement (CPET). It appears that CPET may eventually provide advice on
sustainable palm oil procurement.
Several years ago, at
the urging of WWF, the UK procurement body ruled that only
timber certified under the WWF-sponsored certification
system, FSC, should be procured. The Australian Government
pointed out this breached competitive rules for government
procurement and would rule out purchase of Australian timber
certified under the national sustainable forest standard set
by the Australian standards authority. CPET then reversed
its policy.
It is not immediately clear how DEFRA defines
‘sustainable’ palm oil, but the statement refers to the
certification of the RSPO as the dominant system to verify
palm oil sustainability. The statement does not state that
RSPO certification will be an exclusive procurement
objective.
WWF of course is a founder of RSPO and is
also a key supporter of the Consumer Good Forum (CGF). Through the
CGF, a number of companies have pledged to procure only
sustainable palm oil by 2015. They are finding it difficult
to meet these commitments. The date for UK Government’s
compliance with DEFRA’s sustainable palm oil pledge is
also 2015.
As part of the statement, DEFRA also pledged
to “encourage other consumer nations in Europe and more
widely to take action to switch to sourcing sustainable palm
oil”. Governments do not usually lobby other government to
implement procurement policies that have little economic
impact on their producers. The UK is not a significant
vegetable oil producing country. Lobbying governments to
implement procurement policies that recognize WWF endorsed
certification schemes such as RSPO and FSC (Forest
Stewardship Council) certification is in fact a key WWF
objective. DEFRA have packaged the pledge as part of a wider
UK effort to curb trade in ‘illegal’ commodities that
allegedly drive deforestation, in particular the UK
Department of International Development (DFID) £250 million
program ‘Forest Governance, Markets and Climate
Programme’.
This is getting rather silly. There
has never been any serious accusation that ‘illegal palm
oil’ production is contributing to deforestation.
There is some slippage however among Consumer Good Forum
members about the 2015 target. Unilever, one of the
founders of the Forum (and chair of RSPO) has stated it will
implement its sustainability pledge in 2020. Perhaps DEFRA
have decided they need to give WWF a hand to give weight to
the 2015 target to put a bit of pressure on
Unilever.
There is another possible explanation. UK
produces some rapeseed. It is used for various purposes and
oil produced from it is more expensive than oil produced
from palm oil. DEFRA may be positioning to advocate trade
restrictions on palm oil other than RSPO certified palm oil.
WWF have already pressured the Dutch Government to consider
this.
World Growth Palm Oil Green Development
Campaign
How to Feed 18 Million People in One Day,
All the Time
Press Release – August 6, 2012
New Sustainability Strategies Threaten Food
Security
Press Release - September 5, 2011
Carbon Footprint” Risks Misuse and
Economic Damage, NGO Research Finds
Press Release -
June 30, 2011
NGO Warns The Greens and Xenophon Senate
Bill on Palm Oil Labelling Will Harm The Poor and Damage
Australian Relations with Malaysia and
Indonesia
Press Release - June 22, 2011
World Growth Forestry and Poverty Project
Western Green groups undermining economic
recovery, raising costs for pulp and timber
producers
Press Release – September 12, 2012
Why Rio is a Success – BRICS Shut out
Green Excuses
Media Release – June 22, 2012
The Green Campaign in the
Antipodes
Special Newsletter – August 22, 2011
NGO to Western Retailers – CSR Policies
Can Harm The Poor
Press Release - August 14, 2011
New Report – Leading Companies’ CSR
Policies Contradict Intended Purpose of Responsible Business
Programs
Press Release – May 20, 2011
World Growth In The News
The President Must Be Bold on Pacific
Trade
Roll Call, September 11, 2012
World Growth Chairman Alan Oxley on
Bloomberg
Bloomberg, September 6, 2012
Interview: ‘Sound science and good
economics seem to have disappeared from British policy
making’
The Commentator, 9 August 2012
Greens vilify anyone at odds with
them
The Australia, 2 August 2012
Proposed palm oil law 'goes against Aussie
govt policy'
New Straits Times - June 27, 2011
Cattle ban will mean food shortage for
Indonesia's poor
The Age Editorial by Alan Oxley -
June 9, 2011
Retailers' Standards 'Aid Poor
Farmers'
The Australian - May 23, 2011
Resources
The Development Tragedy – How donor aid
priorities and land use policies threaten food
security
August 2012 – A World Growth Report
Manufacturing Dissent: How the Green
Movement is Distorting FPIC
June 2012 – A World
Growth Report
Road to Rio II: is WWF
delusional?
June 2012 – Green Papers: Issue XI
Road to Rio: How WWF’s Green economy
strategy would impoverish the poor
June 2012 –
Green Papers: Issue X
Restricting Growth: The Impact of
Industrialized Country Climate Strategies on the World’s
Poor
December 2011 – A World Growth Report
Avoiding Green Protectionism
December
2011 - A World Growth Briefing
A Roadblock to Food Security; How Halting
Land Conversion Threatens Food Security in Africa — A Palm
Oil Case Study
November 2011 – Green Papers: Issue
IX
Trees Before Poverty; The World Bank’s
Approach to Forestry and Climate Change
November 2011
– A World Growth Report
Abuse of Sustainability Standards; An Attack
on Free Trade, Competition and Economic
Growth
September 2011 – A World Growth Study
Grappling with Inordinate Uncertainty;
Measuring the Carbon Footprint of Tropical Land-Use
Change
June 2011 - A World Growth Study
Corporate Social Responsibility – How
Global Business is Getting it Wrong in Emerging
Markets
May 2011 – A World Growth Study
A Poison, Not a Cure; The Campaign to Ban
Trade in Illegally Logged Timber
May 2011 – A World
Growth Study
World Bank’s New Anti Poor Palm Oil
Policy
May 2011 – Green Papers: Issue VIII
Green Protectionism and the Lacey
Act
April 2011 – A World Growth Submission
How REDD Will Impoverish the Developing
World and Reduce Biodiversity; An Indonesian Case
Study
March 2011 – A World Growth Study
The Economic Benefit of Palm Oil to
Indonesia
February 2011 – A World Growth Study
World Bank’s Revised Palm Oil Strategy
Undermines Economic Development & Restricts Global
Markets
February 2011 – A World Growth
Submission
Palm Oil and Food Security: The Impediment
of Land Supply; How Environmentalists and “No
Conversion” are Inflating Food Prices
December 2010
– A World Growth Study
REDD and Conservation: Avoiding The New Road
To Serfdom
December 2010 – A World Growth Study
The Issue of Indirect Land Use Change
Associated with Biofuel Consumption; Submission to the
European Commission
October 2010 – A World Growth
Submission
Green Risk and Red Ink: WWF’s Threat to
Free Enterprise
October 2010 – Green Papers: Issue
VII
The RSPO and a Carbon Intensity Standard —
Issues, Facts and Necessity
October 2010 – Green
Papers: Issue VI
Whither Poverty Reduction? The World
Bank’s Visible Green Hand
August 2010 – A World
Growth Submission
Clarification of the European Commission’s
Position on the Renewable Energy Directive
August
2010 – Green Papers: Issue V
Green Protectionism: The New Tool Against
Forestry in Developing Countries
June 2010 – A
World Growth Study
Caught Red Handed: The Myths, Exaggerations
and Distortions of Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth and
Rainforest Action Network
May 2010 – Green Papers:
Issue IV
Greenmail
May 2010 – Green Papers:
Issue III
Collateral Damage: How the Bogus Campaign
Against Palm Oil Harms the Poor
December 2009 – A
World Growth Study
Conversion – The Immutable Link between
Forestry and Development
December 2009 – A World
Growth Study
The New Face of European Environmental
Protectionism: Forestry and Climate Change
December
2009 – A World Growth Briefing
Forestry and Biodiversity: A Healthy
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December 2009 – A World Growth Study
Green Poverty
November 2009 – Green
Papers: Issue II
Don’t Bag Indonesia’s
Poor
October 2009 – Green Papers: Issue I
Palm Oil – The Sustainable
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September 2009 – A World Growth Study
Back to Basics: Restoring Economic Growth to
the Aid Agenda
September 2009 – A World Growth
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Forestry And The Poor: How Forestry Reduces
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August 2009 — A World Growth Study
Forestry and Development: Building the
Foundations for Sustainability
April 2009 — A World
Growth Study
Winners All: How Forestry Can Reduce Both
Climate Change Emissions and Poverty — A Pro-Development
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December 2008 - A World Growth Study
The Real Climate Threat to Developing
Countries — Early, Deep Cuts in Emissions;
December
2007 — A World Growth Study
Technologies for Reducing Greenhouse Gas
Emissions — Strategic Outlook;
November 2007 – A
World Growth Study
Building a Pro-Development Global Strategy
on Climate Change;
August 2007 – A Study by Alan
Oxley, Chairman of World Growth and former Chairman of the
GATT.
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