SUSTAINABLE PALM OIL INSIGHT.pub
Transcription
SUSTAINABLE PALM OIL INSIGHT.pub
Towards Sustainable Palm Oil NOVEMBER 2010 A worker collects oil palm fruits at the state-owned palm oil plantation in Luwu, Indonesia's South Sulawesi province - REUTERS/Yusuf Ahmad TABLE OF CONTENTS (Click the headlines below for the full story) WORLD BANK ARM READY TO BACK PALM OIL IF BAN GOES RSPO ASKS PALM OIL BUYERS TO PLAN GREEN PALM DEMAND GREEN PALM OIL BODY TO SET PLANTER ON ECO-FRIENDLY PATH GREEN GROUPS MUST NOT HIJACK RSPO - PLANTER MALAYSIA'S IOI SAYS PALM PRICES TO STAY STRONG MALAYSIA REPLANTS MORE PALM TO BOOST YIELDS RAINS MAY CUT MALAYSIAN PALM OUTPUT, BOOST PRICES EUROPE BUYERS MUST WIDEN GREEN PALM OIL SCOPE-WWF INDONESIA TO LAUNCH GREEN PALM OIL STANDARDS IN 2011 CARGILL MULLS SCHEME AIMED AT SAVING INDONESIA FORESTS LAND CONFLICTS WITH PALM FIRMS RISE IN INDONESIA ASIAN BUYERS, EMISSIONS IN FOCUS AT GREEN PALM OIL MEET GREEN PALM OIL OUTPUT MUST RISE 5-FOLD BY 2015-AAK GREENER PALM OIL NEEDS MORE ASIA SUPPORT-UNILEVER TABLE-GREEN PALM OIL MORE THAN DOUBLES TO 3.3 MLN TONNES OIL PALM EXPANSION TO SLOW IN INDONESIA-DBS BANK PALM OIL MEET ALSO EYES FARMERS, CO2 SCHEMES NORWAY SAYS MORE AID NEEDED TO SAVE INDONESIAN FOREST DUTCH BUYERS TO IMPORT ONLY GREEN PALM OIL BY 2015 OBAMA TO TARGET FOREST, CLIMATE AID IN INDONESIA TRIP MALAYSIA'S KULIM 2010 PROFIT TO GROW ON PALM INDIA URGED TO CUT IMPORT DUTY ON GREEN PALM OIL PALM OIL FIRM WANTS INDUSTRY TO POSTPONE PROPOSED PLANTING NORMS REUTERS SUMMIT-WILMAR SAYS NO MAJOR IMPACT FROM MORATORIUM INDONESIAN FIRM EYES FIRST GREEN PALM PRODUCT SALE SUSTAINABLE PALM OIL BODY CENSURES INDONESIA'S PT SMART If you would like to receive commodities news brief via email please register at http://online.thomsonreuters.com/commodities_preference Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 WORLD BANK ARM READY TO BACK PALM OIL IF BAN GOES By Niluksi Koswanage JAKARTA, Nov 10 (Reuters) - The World Bank's private sector lender will focus more on palm oil firms pursuing green standards if a suspension on financing the sector is lifted by its president, an official said on Wednesday. The International Finance Corp (IFC) stopped financing the industry in 2009 after social and environmental complaints by smallholders and local communities in Indonesia, prompted a internal review of its lending practices. The IFC has since taken inputs from nearly 3,000 stakeholders to create a new strategy of engagement with the $30 billion palm oil industry that will be forwarded to World Bank President Robert Zoellick by the first quarter of 2011 for approval. Part of the new strategy involves supporting the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) -- a grouping of planters, green groups and consumers that formulated green standards for the industry, said IFC's Director of Global Manufacturing, Agribusiness and Services Atul Mehta. Rains in northern mainland Malaysia have led to floods and planters are concerned the northeast monsoon season in the third quarter of this year will bring heavier than normal showers to key palm oil growing areas in the south. The rains could further boost Malaysian palm oil futures , which have hit successive two-year highs in the past few weeks on a weaker dollar, giving support to competing soyoil and other commodities. "An expectation of 5-10 percent is very plausible once the northeast monsoon sweeps across peninsula Malaysia and it's a valid concern for the planters," M.R Chandran, an independent analyst and former head of the Malaysian Palm Oil Association, told Reuters. Prolonged exposure to rains will raise the moisture content in palm fruit bunches and hurt yield quality, forcing oil palm estates to sell to millers and refiners at a discount. Also, floods will make it difficult to harvest the fruits, creating a supply shortage as trucks find it difficult to transport the commodity to processing plants. "On our performance standards, we already encourage our clients to also aspire to internationally recognised certification very much along the lines of what the RSPO is promoting," Mehta told Reuters in an interview. "That is something we are proposing for companies that are primary producers of palm oil," he said, speaking on the sidelines of the RSPO meeting in Jakarta. Formulating new methods of assessing the palm oil industry' social and environment impacts and favouring investments in firms that depend on small farmers for supply also feature in the new strategy, Mehta said. Although IFC's involvement in the sector is small, having invested $132 million in palm oil projects in Asia, central America, Ukraine and West Africa, the new guideliness may help more potential clients become more eco-friendly, Atul said. "There is increasing interest in operating this business sustainably, so we have had a lot of clients come to see what is our timetable and what is our approach and how we might help them take their business on a sustainable path," he said. If palm oil clients violate commitments to keep forests standing and engage with local communities, the IFC will work with them to ensure they meet standards. Exiting investments will only be a last resort. "If we reach a point which we don't think they have the commitment or they don't meet it, we can invoke contractual requirements to exit," Mehta said. REUTERS/Bazuki Muhammad RAINS MAY CUT MALAYSIAN PALM OUTPUT, BOOST PRICES By Niluksi Koswanage JAKARTA, Nov 10 (Reuters) - Malaysia's palm oil production may fall 5 to 10 percent each month for November and December as heavy rains curb yields and floods make transportation of the vegetable oil difficult, three planters said on Wednesday. Still, another Malaysian palm oil producer said the decline would not be as substantial as previous years as good fertiliser application, thanks to higher returns, will preserve some yields. "I would say about less than a 10 percent drop in production in November and December," said the official, who declined to be identified as he is not authorised to speak to the media. (Continued on page 3) 2 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 The planters were speaking on the sidelines of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil meeting in Jakarta where palm oil firms, consumers and green groups are assessing the industry's eco-credentials. LA NINA AND CHINA? The brewing La Nina weather condition, which emerges right after El Nino's dry spell and brings more rains to Southeast Asia, has revived memories of widespread floods that inundated oil palm estates in Malaysia. In 2007, the La Nina event brought floods to Malaysia and parts of Indonesia, disrupting harvests and lifting palm oil by 10 percent in December and January. The price spike prompted Chinese buyers to scramble for cargoes, pushing the market to a record 4,486 ringgit ($1,448) in March 2008. Malaysian palm oil prices stood at 3,371 ringgit by 0835 GMT on Wednesday. "For the past two years, Malaysia has avoided heavy rains and floods, but this time we may not be so lucky," said another Malaysian planter, who also declined to be identified. "The ISPO will put together all related regulations. Violations related to forestry will be punished according to forestry law and so forth," he said. BOOST GREEN PALM OIL OUTPUT? ISPO is expected to boost the number of palm oil firms that get sustainable certification as the current process by RSPO has been progressing slowly, said Rosediana Suharto, executive chairman of the Indonesian Palm Oil Commission. "There are some palm oil firms that have not yet received RSPO certification for two years," Suharto said. "The government plans to cut greenhouse gas emission and it will be too long if we wait for it (RSPO certification)." Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has pledged to cut emissions by 26 percent from business as usual levels by 2020 or by 41 percent by 2020 if given sufficient international support. At present, only five Indonesian palm oil firms have RSPO certification, while 26 firms are under assessment, said Suharto. Traders in Malaysia said there could be a rush for cargoes by some Asian buyers. Indonesian firms with RSPO certification will still have to meet ISPO standards, but the government will relax the requirements, Suharto said. "We may see some panic buying again but the prices are not going to hit 4,000 ringgit and above because China has bought quite a bit of soybeans for crushing," said a regional vegetable oil trader in Malaysia. "There could be demand destruction at 3,500 ringgit and 3,600 ringgit." PT Astra Agro Lestari Tbk , Indonesia's largest listed plantation firm, is one of producers that have asked for ISPO certification once it is in place, she said. INDONESIA TO LAUNCH GREEN PALM OIL STANDARDS IN 2011 By Fitri Wulandari JAKARTA, Nov 9 (Reuters) - Indonesia will introduce mandatory green standards for palm oil producers next year to help boost output of the vegetable oil and safeguard the environment, officials said on Tuesday. The agriculture ministry in April said it planned to issue Indonesian Sustainable Palm Oil (ISPO) certification to cover the entire operations of planters amid pressure from green groups to halt deforestation that speeds up global warming. The government will make it mandatory for plantation firms and smallholders to apply for ISPO certification starting from January 2011, said Mukti Sarjono, acting director general of plantations for the agriculture ministry. "ISPO will focus on the company's compliance with the laws. Also, it will show that companies are concerned about sustainable palm oil," Sarjono told reporters on the sidelines of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) meeting. Sarjono gave no details on how companies can obtain certification or which agencies would be appointed to grant it. The RSPO, grouping planters, green groups and consumers, is the only other major group to have set up green standards for the whole industry. But unlike RSPO, which does not impose sanctions on members which violate its voluntary standards, those found to be breaking ISPO rules will be punished by law, Sarjono said. An aerial view shows a palm oil plantation in Indonesia's Jambi province. Indonesia may propose palm oil plantations be eligible to earn carbon credit under a U.N.backed scheme aimed at preserving forests, a forestry ministry official said. - REUTERS/Beawiharta (Continued on page 4) 3 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 Astra Agro is not a member of RSPO. Indonesia also plans to register ISPO certification with the World Trade Organisation, a move which will help settle disputes in palm oil trade, Suharto said. Planters said some of the communities' claims on the land were unfounded. Such conflicts have stalled planters' plans to expand and can potentially delay foreign investment, they say. "Registering the certification will give a legal framework. If palm oil buyers suddenly stop buying the oil, we can bring it to the WTO," she said. "Some firms will not get top marks for engaging with local communities, but sometimes it's hard to operate when suddenly a claim comes in from someone who has not even been in the areas," said a Malaysian planter with land in Indonesia, who declined to be identified. Palm oil buyers including Burger King Holdings , Nestle and Unilever , have stopped buying from Indonesia's PT SMART Tbk because of environmental concerns. LAND CONFLICTS WITH PALM FIRMS RISE IN INDONESIA By Niluksi Koswanage JAKARTA, Nov 9 (Reuters) - Conflicts between Indonesian communities and palm oil firms over land use have more than quadrupled to 660 cases in the past six years as the industry aggressively expands, a social activist said on Tuesday. These incidents may grow so long as Indonesia, the No.1 palm oil producer, uses a law to promote the industry's expansion, said Norman Jiwan of the social nongovermental organisation SawitWatch that tracks the cases. Jiwan said the Plantation Act, made law in 2004, has not helped poor Indonesian farmers and local communities, forced off their land by authorities and companies wanting to develop palm oil production. PREVIEW-ASIAN BUYERS, EMISSIONS IN FOCUS AT GREEN PALM OIL MEET By Niluksi Koswanage and Michael Taylor JAKARTA/LONDON, Nov 8 (Reuters) - Buoyed by growing green palm oil production, an industry body will use a meeting this week in Jakarta to persuade top vegetable oil consumers India and China to start buying. The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), which created voluntary standards that include pledges to preserve forests, has certified more than seven percent of 45 million tonnes in global annual output in over two years. But RSPO's efforts risk being overshadowed by squabbles among its stakeholders -- planters, buyers, lenders and green groups -- over adding carbon emission targets to the green standards and tighter financing. "What we hope to get, is that there is still a movement forward," said Jan Kees Vis, global director of sustainable sourcing for consumer goods giant Unilever . Land ownership is an emotive issue in the Southeast Asian country where 40 percent of a population of 220 million depends on agriculture and where land is a farmer's only social security. "We need to get the Indian and the Chinese market involved, which is difficult to do. Both markets have only recently opened up to retail," added Vis, who is also the chairman of the RSPO. "In some of the cases, the people don't want oil palms to enter their lands but they get bulldozed over by the company," Jiwan told Reuters at the sidelines of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) in Jakarta. Vis is one of many industry watchers warning that European demand for green palm oil may not be enough to keep up the momentum and China as well as India, which soak up 40 percent of global output, must get on to the bandwagon. "Once the land belongs to the palm oil company, it is the locals who become the criminals. Under the Plantation Act, a palm oil company can call private or state security to prevent the locals from accessing and taking back the land that belonged to them in the first place." Indian traders have asked the government to cut its tax on eco-friendly palm oil imports to boost demand and the RSPO will probably brainstorm with a trade delegation from China at the meeting to consider similar steps. PROTESTS WALKING AWAY Jiwan said in the past three months, more than 100 Indonesians were arrested for what was described as criminal behaviour against planters during protests over forced land acquisition, unfavourable compensation and other issues. Lingering issues such as calculations about greenhouse gas emitted by plantations and stricter financing rules remain unresolved, which may see the group lose some momentum. The RSPO, which groups planters, NGOs and consumers and formulates standards for the industry that include commitments to preserve forests and engage constructively with local communities, may provide a means of breaking the impasse. While planters and green groups agree estate expansion at the expense of forests and processing palm oil emits climate-warming carbon dioxide, they are divided on how to interpret the CO2 data and set standards. The industry-driven body has now included a new policy that requires planters to get community feedback prior to opening up new lands, a measure that planters do not favour as it disrupts long-term operational plans. "The planters are always asking for a period of adjustment but they need to realise the impact of their actions on forests and communities is very immediate," Jiwan said. "Last year, if we had passed a members' resolution to adopt greenhouse gas principles, a large part of the plantation community would have walked away," said Ian McIntosh, president of the British unit of Swedish oils processor AAK . (Continued on page 5) 4 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 Environmentalists say the standards should be implemented now to shore up RSPO's credibility but officials say figuring out how to set the calculations for CO2 emissions from palm oil firms' operations remains a work in progress. Even established RSPO standards are a problem. Some standards and their adoption as a covenant for financing will further slow the industry's growth, planters say. Kuala Lumpur-listed Genting Plantations said a new RSPO policy that required community feedback prior to opening up new lands would disrupt its operations and it plans to support a bid to postpone the policy at the fourday meeting. The Indonesian Palm Oil Producers' Association (GAPKI) will also question the World Bank at the gathering over what it calls a discriminatory plan by the body's global financing arm to supply credit only to RSPO-certified planters. But the World Bank is following in the footsteps of lenders such as Standard Chartered and Rabobank who say adopting the standard helps to assess clients. "As awareness of the environmental impacts of the industry has increased, financing has, indeed, tightened," said Yulanda Chung, head of sustainable business with Standard Chartered. HSBC's Climate Change Fund this year stopped investing in Singapore's Golden Agri after environmental group Greenpeace accused the firm's Indonesian unit, SMART TBK , of destroying forests. Greenpeace's social media campaign against SMART, which also set off a consumer backlash, environment audits and a grievance panel against the planter set up by the RSPO, still rankles some in the industry. Other palm oil firms such as Kulim , which has certified estates in Papua New Guinea and southern Malaysia, reckon adopting standards could spur expansion. "If becoming green differentiates us from our rivals in getting financing and winning clients over, we are all for it. It all boils down to good, old-fashioned business investment," said Kulim Chief Operating Officer Zulkifli Ibrahim. PALM OIL MEET ALSO EYES FARMERS, CO2 SCHEMES JAKARTA, Nov 8 (Reuters) - An industry body that promotes eco-friendly palm oil says encouraging small farmers to preserve forests and protect wildlife is the next step in dispelling the industry's negative image. The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) meets in Jakarta this week to deliberate on the on-going development of a certification system for smallholders who contribute more than a third of the world's total annual output of 45 million tonnes. Indonesia, which has huge tracts of tropical forests but a rapid deforestation rate, is under international pressure to slow deforestation and the destruction of peatlands that release planet-warming greenhouse gases when cleared or burned. A group of environmentalists, planters and buyers from over 40 countries will discuss other issues, including U.S. President Barack Obama's visit to Indonesia in the same week, when he is expected to provide forest and climate aid. Here are some key issues to be discussed at the meeting: GETTING SMALLHOLDERS INVOLVED The high costs of auditing plantation operations meant only the largest, cash-rich palm oil firms were able to afford the process of certification when the scheme started in 2008. Many of these private firms and state agencies in Indonesia and Malaysia found it made business sense to bear the costs of auditing the farmers who supply to their mills as consumer and NGO scrutiny of the industry grows. For independent smallholders, unattached to a government scheme or a company, the RSPO is studying plans to set up a fund to assist with the costs of environmental and social assessment. The RSPO has embarked on trial audits using a standard devised for smallholders and the meeting this week will see the first RSPO certificate awarded to a smallholder group in Indonesia. CARBON CREDIT SCHEMES Norway's $1-billion climate aid to Indonesia includes an investment in a forest carbon offset programme that rewards the world's largest palm oil producer for preserving forests and a proposed ban on forest clearing, which may slow the industry's expansion. During President Obama's trip to Indonesia this week, he could announce how $700 million allocated to Indonesia by a U.S foreign aid agency can be used to fund climate change and forest conservation programmes. Palm oil firms, who say the industry has long been vilified for felling forests and draining peatlands that pump huge amounts of planet-warming carbon dioxide, are divided on the impact of these carbon schemes. Even with the moratorium on forest clearing, there is ample degraded land in Indonesia to expand into, Singaporelisted Wilmar said in an interview last month. U.S. agribusiness giant Cargill said the carbon credit schemes would limit the areas available for expansion but it would help planters determine their development plans. The firm also said it may invest in a carbon scheme. RIVAL GREEN PALM OIL STANDARDS Stung by the successful green campaign against Indonesian planters like SMART TBK , the government plans to introduce its own version of green certificates for palm oil producers. But planters and financiers worry the Indonesian Sustainable Palm Oil (ISPO) assesment may confuse the industry although an RSPO official, on the condition of anonymity, said the scheme could work if it was based on getting RSPO assessment first. Non-governmental organisations say it will be important to see how plantations were assessed under the ISPO and whether other stakeholders like local communities and green groups are involved in the process. It is not clear if the assessment will be mandatory or voluntary, like the RSPO or the Malaysian Palm Oil Board's code of practice. (Continued on page 6) 5 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 TABLE-GREEN PALM OIL MORE THAN DOUBLES TO 3.3 MLN TONNES JAKARTA, Nov 8 (Reuters) - Green palm oil processing capacity has more than doubled to 3.3 million tonnes from March as scrutiny by green groups spurs buyers to take up more and planters to commit to environment standards. That represents more than seven percent of total annual global production of 45 million tonnes certified by the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) -- an industry body of buyers, green groups and planters. So far, 22 of 85 growers have certified some of their processing capacity under the RSPO with commitments to source palm oil from estates that do not fell forests, harm wildlife or exploit local communities to expand. RSPO officials said demand for the eco-friendly palm oil picked up after green group WWF named European buyers who had shunned the pricey product in a move that derailed efforts to preserve rainforests and erased much of green palm oil's premium to $3-5 per tonne as supplies piled up. PALM OIL MEET ALSO EYES FARMERS, CO2 SCHEMES JAKARTA, Nov 8 (Reuters) - An industry body that promotes eco-friendly palm oil says encouraging small farmers to preserve forests and protect wildlife is the next step in dispelling the industry's negative image. The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) meets in Jakarta this week to deliberate on the on-going development of a certification system for smallholders who contribute more than a third of the world's total annual output of 45 million tonnes. Indonesia, which has huge tracts of tropical forests but a rapid deforestation rate, is under international pressure to slow deforestation and the destruction of peatlands that release planet-warming greenhouse gases when cleared or burned. A group of environmentalists, planters and buyers from over 40 countries will discuss other issues, including U.S. President Barack Obama's visit to Indonesia in the same week, when he is expected to provide forest and climate aid. MALAYSIA Mills certified Crude palm oil (tonnes) United Plantations 6 200,456 Sime Darby Kulim 15 3 522,394 88,914 Wilmar International 7 283,458 IOI Corp Kuala Lumpur Kepong Berhad 5 5 319,539 211,978 Carotino 1 30,300 Felda 2 102,884 Keresa Plantations Malaysia TOTAL 1 45 33,874 1,793,797 Sime Darby Wilmar 1 2 33,609 108,904 PT Musim Mas Indonesia 2 143,459 London Sumatra Indonesia Tbk SIPEF Cargill 4 2 4 169,480 78,158 186,892 Bakrie Sumatera Tbk PT Agrowiratama Indonesia PT Berkat Sawit Sejati Indonesia 1 1 1 36,438 46,635 54,166 1 37,430 1 2 99,109 29,577 1 23 63,000 1,086,857 Palm oil firms, who say the industry has long been vilified for felling forests and draining peatlands that pump huge amounts of planet-warming carbon dioxide, are divided on the impact of these carbon schemes. New Britain Palm Oil 5 277,524 SIPEF TOTAL 2 7 95,010 372,534 Even with the moratorium on forest clearing, there is ample degraded land in Indonesia to expand into, Singaporelisted Wilmar said in an interview last month. INDONESIA PT Perkebunan Nusantara III Indones PT Sukajadi Sawit Mekar Indonesia PT Inti Indosawit Subur Indonesia PT First Mujur Plantation & Industry TOTAL PAPUA NEW GUINEA Here are some key issues to be discussed at the meeting: GETTING SMALLHOLDERS INVOLVED The high costs of auditing plantation operations meant only the largest, cash-rich palm oil firms were able to afford the process of certification when the scheme started in 2008. Many of these private firms and state agencies in Indonesia and Malaysia found it made business sense to bear the costs of auditing the farmers who supply to their mills as consumer and NGO scrutiny of the industry grows. For independent smallholders, unattached to a government scheme or a company, the RSPO is studying plans to set up a fund to assist with the costs of environmental and social assessment. The RSPO has embarked on trial audits using a standard devised for smallholders and the meeting this week will see the first RSPO certificate awarded to a smallholder group in Indonesia. CARBON CREDIT SCHEMES Norway's $1-billion climate aid to Indonesia includes an investment in a forest carbon offset programme that rewards the world's largest palm oil producer for preserving forests and a proposed ban on forest clearing, which may slow the industry's expansion. During President Obama's trip to Indonesia this week, he could announce how $700 million allocated to Indonesia by a U.S foreign aid agency can be used to fund climate change and forest conservation programmes. (Continued on page 7) 6 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 U.S. agribusiness giant Cargill said the carbon credit schemes would limit the areas available for expansion but it would help planters determine their development plans. The firm also said it may invest in a carbon scheme. The Roundtable meets in Jakarta next week to discuss how far the palm oil industry has travelled on the eco-friendly path as well as look at ways of getting buyers to take up growing green palm oil output. RIVAL GREEN PALM OIL STANDARDS The Netherlands has been a focal point for Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth to wage campaigns against palm oil as the country takes up 2 million, or 4 percent, of global output, making it one of Europe's biggest buyers. Stung by the successful green campaign against Indonesian planters like SMART TBK , the government plans to introduce its own version of green certificates for palm oil producers. But planters and financiers worry the Indonesian Sustainable Palm Oil (ISPO) assesment may confuse the industry although an RSPO official, on the condition of anonymity, said the scheme could work if it was based on getting RSPO assessment first. Non-governmental organisations say it will be important to see how plantations were assessed under the ISPO and whether other stakeholders like local communities and green groups are involved in the process. It is not clear if the assessment will be mandatory or voluntary, like the RSPO or the Malaysian Palm Oil Board's code of practice. DUTCH BUYERS TO IMPORT ONLY GREEN PALM OIL BY 2015 The Dutch Taskforce accounts for most of the demand. These levels represent about two-thirds of palm oil processing capacity in top producers Indonesia and Malaysia that passed green standards set by the Roundtable. uch of the Dutch palm oil imports are processed and reexported to the rest of Europe with close to half a million tonnes used domestically, data from Hamburg-based oilseed researchers Oil World show. The Dutch Taskforce's move comes as Indian traders ask their government to cut its tax on green palm oil imports by one to two percent in a bid to boost consumption in the world's largest palm oil buyer. OBAMA TO TARGET FOREST, CLIMATE AID IN INDONESIA TRIP By Sunanda Creagh and David Fogarty JAKARTA/SINGAPORE, Nov 3 (Reuters) - When U.S. President Barack Obama flies over the vast Indonesian archipelago next week, he will see first hand the size of two of the nation's greatest and most threatened resources: its forests and seas. Both are widely expected to be at the heart of efforts to boost ties between the United States and Indonesia and to step up the fight against climate change, officials and sources say. Indonesia has some of the world's most complex and diverse forests but also one of the highest deforestation rates. REUTERS/Yusuf Ahmad Saving them from illegal logging and unsustainable clearing for agriculture and mining could help Indonesia meet its goals to cut greenhouse emissions -- the third highest globally according to the World Bank when taking into account deforestation and land use. KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 6 (Reuters) - Dutch vegetable oil suppliers have pledged to order only eco-friendly palm oil cargoes by 2015 as consumers and green groups continue to scrutinise the sector, an industry official said. It would also help the United States in its aims to fight climate change, and help Indonesia become a source of tradeable forest carbon offsets that would help polluting U.S industries meet future targets to cut emissions. Dubbed the Dutch Taskforce on Sustainable Palm Oil, the initiative will get local firms to pledge to buy palm oil from estates that do not clear forests or peatlands in Southeast Asia to expand, said Frans Claassen, an official with the taskforce. The reasoning is simple. Forests, particularly tropical rainforests, soak up huge amounts of planet-warming carbon dioxide, acting as a brake on climate change. Clearing and burning forests accelerates the pace of global warming. "Over the next few years, we will work very hard to ensure that all palm oil used...will be sustainable," said Claassen, a director with the Dutch Product Board of Margarine, Fats and Oils (MVO) that spearheaded the initiative. "In other words, (this refers to palm oil purchased) in accordance with one of the trading systems approved by the RSPO," Claassen added, referring to the Roundtable of Sustainable Palm Oil that formulates green standards for the industry. During his trip, Obama could announce how some of the $700 million allocated to Indonesia by the Millennium Challenge Corporation can be used to fund climate change and forest conservation programmes, a source said. The MCC is a U.S. foreign aid agency set up under the Bush administration. (Continued on page 8) 7 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 "It will be quite substantial. It's safe to say it will be north of $100 million on an annual basis," said the industry source. That comes on the heels of Norway's $1 billion climate deal with Indonesia announced earlier this year. "The U.S. doesn't want to compete directly with the Norwegians but they do want similar big headline news." UNDER PRESSURE The visit could also reveal details about implementing a four-year programme worth between $35 million and $40 million on fighting deforestation, reducing loss of biodiversity and improving land use management. The scheme was announced earlier this year. Details may also emerge on a further $20 million pledged for marine conservation, a source said, while steps to promote clean-energy development could also be announced. USAID, the overseas aid agency, is working on a proposal to fund a programme named the "Indonesian Forestry and Climate Support Project" to run until 2014 and the presidential visit could generate details on the project's implementation as well. Among the project's aims are halving the rate of forest degradation and loss from conversion, illegal logging, over-harvesting and fires for at least 6 million hectares (15 million acres) in targeted areas. It also plans to boost training, funds for forest management, development of low-carbon growth plans in at least 8 districts and steps to improve management of highconservation value forests that also include large areas of orangutan habitat. Indonesia needs cash to save its dwindling forests and sees a natural role as a major player in a future carbon market trading forestry carbon credits. The country is also under intense international pressure to fight deforestation and the burning of its forests that regularly smothers its neighbours in smoky haze. SEEING GREEN IN REDD The United States could eventually become a major buyer of forest carbon offsets under a U.N.-backed scheme called reducing emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD). REDD aims to reward developing nations for protecting, restoring and sustainably managing rainforests. Projects that set aside large areas of forest for decades would earn tradeable credits for the CO2 locked away by the trees -- a trade potentially worth billions of dollars a year. The U.S has an interest in protecting Indonesia's forests not just because of the valuable role they play sucking greenhouse gases out of the air, but also as a key part of a potential future forest offsets trading industry, observers say. "They are trying to find a way to protect their future offsets but they have also seen how important Indonesian forests are for the global climate crisis," said Jakarta-based Greenpeace forest campaigner Bustar Maitar. "Indonesian forests are as important as forests in the Amazon and the Congo." The climate bill passed last year by the U.S. House of Representatives allowed imports of REDD credits but the legislation has been since been shelved. Undeterred, the United States, Norway, Japan and dozens of other countries created a REDD partnership worth about $4 billion earlier this year aimed building up REDD pilot projects and national institutions in developing nations over the short term. Indonesia's seas are also a key resource, its coral reefs some of the richest in the world and vital for fisheries but also under threat from overfishing and warming seas. U.S. cash is also likely to help the Coral Triangle that stretches from the Solomon Islands northeast of Australia to Bali, Borneo and the Philippines. MALAYSIA'S KULIM 2010 PROFIT TO GROW ON PALM By Saumyadeb Chakrabarty and Niluksi Koswanage KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 2 (Reuters) - Malaysian planter Kulim expects profits for FY 2010 to be "much higher" than last year's 146 million ringgit ($47.17 million), driven by its expansion into Papua New Guinea (PNG) and a rally in palm oil prices. Profits ending Dec. 31 would also benefit from the sale of an oleochemical plant to Singapore's Wilmar for $140 million, Kulim's Chief Operating Officer Zulkifli Ibrahim told Reuters in an interview on Tuesday. "We expect strong growth in 2010 earnings due to high average selling price of crude palm, the one-time income from the sale of the oleochemical business and strong growth at the food division," Zulkifli said. Kulim derives about 60 percent of its profits from its plantations business in Malaysia as well as PNG, where it operates via London-listed unit New Britain Palm Oil (NBPOL). The rest comes from its food business via QSR Brands , which licenses fast food chains including KFC . Analysts expect a profit of 251 million ringgit for 2010, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. Zulkifli said the firm, with a market value of about $1 billion, would maintain its current dividend payout of around 30 percent. The firm's average selling prices for crude palm oil for 2010 and 2011 may hover around 2,700-2,800 ringgit per tonne on weather concerns, Zulkifli said. Benchmark Malaysian prices just crossed the 3,100 ringgit level on Tuesday. EYEING ECO-FRIENDLY ACQUISITIONS Kulim is eyeing acquisitions in Malaysia to add on to its existing 38,000 hectares and the offers have been coming in, Zulkifli said. Malaysia planters now expand through buying established estates rather than developing greenfield areas as land has run out. "If the new estates offered to us can fit with the principles of the RSPO we are interested," Zulkifli said, refering to the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil -- an industry body that sets standards for producing ecofriendly palm oil. (Continued on page 9) 8 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 "We are staying away from peatlands, high conservation value areas and high gradient areas," he said. The firm's unit NBPOL bought 25,000 hectares of oil palm estates in PNG for $175 million from agribusiness giant Cargill , bringing total holdings to over 113,000 hectares this year. Kulim and NBPOL oil palm estates have been certified under RSPO standards except for the new aquisitions from Cargill. Kulim shares were up 2.4 percent at 0742 GMT, outperforming the broader market SLOWER EXPANSION Greater scrutiny of the way oil palm estates are developed in top producer Indonesia and strict rules have slowed expansion from a peak rate of 600,000 hectares annually during the commodity boom of 2007-2008. "In 2010, this expansion was between 200,000 and 250,000 hectares. It could slow down further but current high prices will ensure that in 2011, expansion will be at least 250,000 hectares," Mistry said. A problem also lies in the availability of suitable land for planting and bank credit, Mistry said. Eventually, slower palm expansion will lead to lower production and bullish vegetable oil prices, he said. INDIA URGED TO CUT IMPORT DUTY ON GREEN PALM OIL By Niluksi Koswanage KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 1 (Reuters) - A vegetable oils industry body has asked the Indian government to cut its tax on eco-friendly imports of the commodity by one to two percent in a bid to boost consumption, a top trader said on Monday. India, the world's largest vegetable oil buyer, appears to be heeding a call for large consumers to become more environmentally friendly and buy palm oil from estates committed to protecting forests in Southeast Asia. Dorab Mistry, head of vegetable oils trading arm of Godrej International and a leading analyst, said the firm's parent spearheaded the Hindustan Unilever coalition of refiners and traders that put the proposal to the government. "Palm oil prices will eventually come down and when that happens, the duties will have to start rising. We propose there should always be a 1-2 percent discounted duty on green palm oil," Mistry told Reuters in an interview. "The duties will come into play, it's a matter of time. When it does, this mechanism will help, " Mistry said ahead of a meeting of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) in Jakarta next week. Price-sensitive India usually buys palm oil from Indonesia and Malaysia as well as soyoil from Argentina and Brazil to feed its rapidly growing population. India has kept to a zero import tax for crude palm oil as world prices are high and does not differentiate between certified and non-certified palm oil. PALM OIL FIRM WANTS INDUSTRY TO POSTPONE PROPOSED PLANTING NORMS By Fong Min Hun KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 1 (Reuters) - Malaysia's Genting Plantations wants an industry body tasked with setting environment standards to postpone a proposed new planting policy that it says may disrupt long-term operational plans. The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil -- a group of planters, consumers and non-governmental organisations -- has included a new policy that requires planters to get community feedback prior to opening up new lands. Dubbed the New Planting Procedure (NPP), the policy also requires planters to address all grievances prior to commencing operations in a new area, a move that may slow expansion especially in top palm oil producer Indonesia. Genting Plantation's sustainability vice president Chew Jit Seng told Reuters in an interview the planter will support an effort to postpone the policy, initially proposed by NGOs, at an RSPO conference in Jakarta on Nov. 8. "The Malaysians and Indonesians (growers) are proposing for NPP to be postponed because we need to consult with locals and actually do a field trial to see how it would really work on the ground," he said. Chew said the RSPO's NPP is a groundbreaking rule but it needs to be implemented over a period of time, which could otherwise disrupt growers' operations when demand for palm oil has been on the rise. The RSPO assesses the environmental and social impact of oil palm estates and those which meet its standards can sell certificates to consumers for every tonne of green palm, under the GreenPalm trading system. Mistry said the proposed discount would offset the cost of buying green palm certificates, which stands at about $7$8 per tonne. Benchmark Malaysian palm oil hit a 27month high of 3,095 ringgit ($1,001) on Monday. But the GreenPalm system does not encourage separate supply chains for green palm oil and not so environmentally friendly palm oil, green groups say. "Segregation of green palm oil is very expensive and does not have any meaning," Mistry said. "What matters is how palm plantations are developed and managed. REUTERS/Yusuf Ahmad (Continued on page 10) 9 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 ECONOMIC SENSE FOR GREEN PALM? None of Genting Plantation's operations are presently RSPO-certified but planter will be seeking certification starting next year. "The companies have the support and commitment of their respective managements and boards on how they will address each of the RSPO grievance panel's concerns," the statement said on Thursday. Growers in general recognise the importance of sustainability, but say any plans have to make economic sense before being implemented on a large scale, Chew said. Genting Plantations will lobby for more stringent regulations on consumers buying green palm oil. At present, there is a lack of demand, which led to much smaller premiums for eco-friendly palm oil than expected. The RSPO has also asked Golden Agri to submit a membership application ahead of its annual meeting that starts on Nov. 8. The premium enjoyed by sustainable palm oil over regular supplies has dropped to around $6.50 per tonne from an earlier promise of a $50 premium, Chew said. SMART runs the Indonesia palm oil operations of Golden Agri, which is controlled by the Widjaja family, whose business empire Sinar Mas has interests in pulp and paper, finance and property. Towards that end, he said Genting and other growers would like to see more rigorous stipulations on buyers to purchase more sustainable palm oil. "Of the 3.2 million metric tonnes of sustainable palm oil that has been produced so far, there has been uptake of only about 30 percent," Chew said. Stricter regulation on the deadline for sustainable palm oil users to comply with usage criteria would bolster demand and improve yield, he said. GREEN PALM OIL BODY TO SET PLANTER ON ECO-FRIENDLY PATH Golden Agri has engaged an NGO to help it prepare over 430,000 hectares of oil palms and 40 mills across Indonesia as of June this year for certification audit, the statement said. SMART officials involved in the RSPO including the firm's President Director Daud Dharsono will step down from any roles until March 2011 -- a move seen as putting to rest concerns the firm will influence the RSPO's decisions. "The RSPO is becoming a more credible intermediary between producers and buyers," said James Ratnam, a plantations analyst with Malaysia's TA Investment Bank. NGOs say the RSPO has become ineffectual as it works as a greenwash for planters who make up the bulk of the membership and palm oil firms contend the industry body has been hijacked by green groups -- charges the RSPO has denied. By Niluksi Koswanage KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 1 (Reuters) - An industry body promoting green palm oil has approved plans by a key Indonesian planter last week to resolve concerns of environmental destruction that may prompt some customers to resume supply ties. The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) -- a grouping of consumers, green groups and planters -- set up a grievance panel against a member, PT SMART , after an environment audit gave the firm a mixed scorecard. The results showed SMART, one of Indonesia's biggest palm oil firms, had planted in greenhouse gas-rich peatlands but did not fell pristine forests. The RSPO also put pressure on SMART's parent Golden Agri Resources to apply for membership after ticking off the firm for publicly implying it was in the process of obtaining RSPO certification. "Once SMART's parent becomes certified, I think customers will be comfortable, especially in the case of IOI ," a Singaporean palm oil trader said on Monday, referring to the Malaysian planter's move to cut ties with SMART. But others say it may be an uphill task for SMART to win back some clients after it gets RSPO certification. GREEN GROUPS MUST NOT HIJACK RSPO - PLANTER By Michael Taylor LONDON, Oct 29 (Reuters) - Green groups' influence within industry body the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) should not outweigh the voices of other palm oil players such as growers and buyers, a West African planter said on Friday. The RSPO, an industry body of consumers, green groups and plantation companies, was formed in 2004 and aims to promote growth and use of sustainable oil palm products. Palm oil is used in products such as food, cosmetics and biofuels. "If you want to be sustainable, the RSPO helps provide guidelines, but sometimes the plantation guys feel that that has been a bit hijacked by the environmental groups, who are just trying to stop it (industry expansion)," Michael Frayne, chairman of Equatorial Palm Oil told Reuters. "Some of the problems are these big groups (plantations) are finding it hard to get properly (RSPO) accredited," he said, speaking ahead of the RSPO's annual meeting in Jakarta from Nov. 8-11. Burger King stopped buying from SMART even after the audit partly cleared the firm, although Unilever said it will resume ties after the planter gets RSPO certification. But palm oil firms face pressure from green groups to halt practices that contribute to global warming such as deforestation and open burning. PATH TO ECO-FRIENDLY PALM Accusations from green groups over deforestation have led to some firms boycotting certain plantation companies. In a joint statement issued with Golden Agri and RSPO, SMART agreed to provide compensation for land cleared without assessing environmental impact and to embark on a peat restoration project on some of its estates in Indonesia.. "There are a lot of shades of grey in all this," said Frayne, whose firm is part of the RSPO and has about 169,000 hectares of land in Liberia. (Continued on page 11) 10 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 "It's the balance that is there, and that seems to be shifting back and forth a bit," he added. "Environmental groups need to try and work with the palm oil companies ... (but) there are some groups saying you can't do anymore development." "I think we can easily achieve 17.5 million tonnes (in 2011) even with this new replanting scheme as there will be more young oil palms coming into maturity," Shahrir told Reuters in his first interview with the foreign media as MPOB chief. Established in 2006, the company plans to start production of about 3,000-4,000 tonnes per year from December onwards. The London AIM-listed firm has invested about $15 million in its palm oil plantation business. Shahrir's forecast was 4.9 percent lower than the government's production target of 18.4 million tonnes for next year and roughly the same as his projection of 17.5 million tonnes in 2010. "I don't think there will be a drop in production even after the erratic weather this year. The younger trees are quite resilient," he said. "You are often going into extremely poor countries, where this makes a huge difference to the local people -- it can transform their lives with potential from employment," Frayne said. "Palm oil is the biggest vegetable oil in the world, so you can't just stop it all. RUSH TO AFRICA Malaysia and Indonesia account for around 90 percent of the world's supply of palm oil, which is about 45 million tonnes each year, and Frayne sees big advantages in shifting some of that production westwards to Africa. Africa imports around 2 million tonnes of palm oil every year, compared with about 8 million tonnes in India and 7 million tonnes in China. Producers say the advantagesof producing African palm oil for African consumers, is that it keeps transportation costs down at a time when there is a shortage in the region, which also pushes prices higher than in Asia. Golden Agri-Resources , the second-largest plantation company listed in Singapore, and the world's biggest listed palm oil firm, Wilmar are looking to develop land in Africa. "We've got very good government support where we are -they see the industry as a huge potential employer for the country," Frayne said. "We're not in primary forest." Annual production capacity of RSPO-certified sustainable palm oil jumped over the 3 million tonnes mark last month, according to the Roundtable. Food groups such as Unilever and Nestle have made pledges to gradually switch to sourcing all palm oil from sustainably certified sources. "The way the world is going, there is an enormous market for that," he added. "We intend to produce sustainable palm oil." MALAYSIA REPLANTS MORE PALM TO BOOST YIELDS Early this year, El Nino-driven hotter weather dried up yields and lifted the Malaysian benchmark palm oil prices , which have gained almost 15 percent so far this year. The weather condition was quickly followed by La Nina, which brings more rains and floods to Southeast Asian that can complicate harvesting and transport of palm fruits. Malaysia exports almost 90 percent of its output. Last year, Malaysia derived 37 billion ringgit from crude palm oil exports and 13 billion for refined products and oleochemicals. Shahrir said the government would allocate up to 127 million ringgit to further develop the refining and oleochemicals industries with aid mostly targeted at Sime , IOI Corp and KL Kepong -- the top three palm oil companies in the country. EYES NEW AUDIT BODY The MPOB is in discussions with the government on possible mandatory green standards to ensure palm oil does not come from estates that expand by felling forests and marginalising local communities, Shahrir said. MPOB has a code of practice for palm oil firms to halt environment pollution since 2007 and firms such as IJM Plantations , Genting Plantations and KL Kepong have adopted this code. "The code is similar to the RSPO's principles and criteria," Shahrir said, referring to the industry-driven Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil that has produced a certification system whose participants have to commit to preserve the environment. "The industry has asked that we keep this code voluntary like the RSPO but we are also in discussions with the government on starting up an audit body to look at the industry, to ensure that the standards are met," Shahrir said ahead of the RSPO conference early next month in Jakarta. By Niluksi Koswanage and Angie Teo KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 29 (Reuters) - The Malaysian government's new replanting scheme will target 365,000 hectares of oil palms older than 25 years as the world's No.2 palm oil producer tries to lift flagging output, a top industry official said on Friday. Industry regulator the Malaysian Palm Oil Board's (MPOB) new chairman, Shahrir Samad, said the scheme would take two to three years to complete and the government had pledged 297 million Malaysian ringgit ($95.56 million) under the 2011 budget. The scheme is the latest inItiative to boost yields in Malaysia, which has fallen behind top producer Indonesia in terms of output. An earlier industry-funded scheme to replant 200,000 hectares in 2008 in a bid to boost slumping prices was almost completed this year. REUTERS/Beawiharta (Continued on page 12) 11 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 EUROPE BUYERS MUST WIDEN GREEN PALM OIL SCOPE-WWF By Michael Taylor LONDON, Oct 28 (Reuters) - European palm oil buyers must extend sustainability policies beyond their European borders and into emerging consuming markets such as India and China, environment group WWF said on Thursday. Palm oil firms in Indonesia and Malaysia face pressure from green groups to halt practices that contribute to global warming such as deforestation and open burning. Food groups such as Unilever and Nestle have made pledges to gradually switch to sourcing all palm oil from sustainably certified sources. "Someone like a Unilever -- that currently talks about sustainable palm oil in its European market -- should be doing that in China and India where it also has a presence," Adam Harrison, policy officer for food and agriculture for WWF in Scotland, told Reuters. "Companies need to talk about it in the same way they talk about it in Europe," he added, ahead of the RSPO's annual meeting in Jakarta from Nov. 8-11. The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) an industry body of consumers, green groups and plantation companies, was formed in 2004 and aims to promote growth and use of sustainable oil palm products. Annual production capacity of RSPO-certified sustainable palm oil jumped over the 3 million tonnes mark last month, according to the Roundtable. Consumer goods giant Unilever has pledged to buy only from certified sustainable plantations from 2015. PRIVATE LABEL Earlier this month, Wal-Mart Stores Inc , the world's largest retailer, said it would require that palm oil from sustainable sources be used in all of its private-label products by the end of 2015. "It's RSPO they are going for," Harrison said. Palm oil, the world's most traded edible oil, is used in products ranging from shampoos to biofuels. "It was a long slog in Europe -- getting awareness and confidence in the RSPO -- and that hasn't really started in China and India," said Harrison, who is RSPO vice president. Palm oil planters have complained that premiums for eco-friendly palm oil are not high enough to encourage production. Last week, Swedish oils manufacturer AAK said production of sustainable certified palm oil needed to increase about fivefold in the next five years, to meet buyers' commitments. "If you look at what is already out in the open in terms of commitment from the supply and demand side -- just from the people we know about -- there is about 10-15 million tonnes of production capacity," said Harrison. "A lot of companies are congregating around the 2015 deadline for 100 percent certified palm oil to be used," he added. Part of that is getting the message back to growers." EVIDENCE NEEDED Malaysia and Indonesia account for around 90 percent of the world's supply of palm oil, which is about 45 million tonnes each year. But accusations from green groups over deforestation have led to some firms boycotting certain plantation companies. In August, PT SMART Tbk released an independent audit after Greenpeace alleged that the Indonesian palm oil giant bulldozed high conservation value forests and damaged carbon-rich peatlands. One month later, the RSPO made its first public censure of a member, saying SMART breached its principles and may face sanctions, and also ticked off the firm's parent. "We are always saying to members and non-members, that the only way we're ever going to be able to police this, is if we do have people coming forward with evidence," said Harrison, who is also on the RSPO complaints panel. Last year, the WWF issued a buyer's scorecard that showed most European palm oil buyers have shunned green palm oil priced at a premium. "We are doing it every two years," said Harrison. "The intention is for the (RSPO) roundtable next year, they will require members to report on volume data ... keeping track of what RSPO members are up to." CARGILL MULLS SCHEME AIMED AT SAVING INDONESIA FORESTS By Niluksi Koswanage and Fitri Wulandari KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 27 (Reuters) - Agribusiness giant Cargill Inc may well become the first major palm oil buyer to invest in a carbon credit scheme that rewards nations like Indonesia for preserving forests, a key official said on Wednesday. The reduced emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD) proposal would provide a stamp of approval for firms like Cargill to assure consumers that products made from palm oil follow eco-friendly guidelines, giving it cover from green campaigns that allege widespread habitat destruction. Participation by Cargill would breathe life into the scheme now mostly pushed by governments. "As for our direct involvement in the scheme, we're in the early days," Cargill Tropical Oils Chief Operating Officer John Hartmann told Reuters in a telephone interview from Singapore. "We're exploring this option but we need to see how the rules are written before we make any commitment." Cargill runs two mid-sized plantations in Indonesia and buys palm oil from suppliers like Jakarta-listed SMART Tbk that recently came under fire for allegations of clearing forests and peatlands. For a PDF package on the issue: (http://r.reuters.com/hej64n ) (Continued on page 13) 12 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 Palm oil firms in Indonesian and Malaysia, the world's top producers, are eager to expand as demand for vegetable oil soars from China and India, sending benchmark prices above the 3,000 ringgit for the first time since July 2008 just last week. Groups like Greenpeace however argue that expansion of Indonesia's plantations come at the expense of cutting down pristine forests, which leads to more carbon dioxide pumped into the atmosphere. The REDD scheme, which seeks to limit carbon by putting key forest reserves off limits and identifying marginal lands that could be reclaimed for palm oil plantations, is also a part of Norway's $1 billion climate aid deal to Indonesia. Part of Norway's agreement includes a formal survey or marginal or degraded lands -- which are largely seen as the main mode of industry expansion in the world's largest palm oil producer. Cargill said it broadly supported the idea. "We are talking about degraded land that will have specific definition which is more stringent than high conservation value definition," Hartmann said, referring to further high carbon value assessments. "In essence, it will reduce the area that's available for plantation expansion. But at the same time...it will assist palm oil plantation companies to determine their development plans." Singapore investment bank Hwang-DBS said last week palm oil firms in Indonesia will hold back on aggressive planting in 2010 and the years to come despite capital raising exercises last year to exploit low interest rates. The bank said 60 percent of the initial location permit issued to planters will be developed compared to its previous assumption of 80 percent. GREEN PALM OIL OUTPUT MUST RISE 5-FOLD BY 2015AAK By Michael Taylor LONDON, Oct 22 (Reuters) - Production of sustainable certified palm oil needs to increase about fivefold in the next five years, to meet buyers' commitments, the British unit of Swedish oils manufacturer AAK said on Friday. The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), an industry body of consumers, green groups and plantation companies, was formed in 2004 and aims to promote growth and use of sustainable oil palm products. Annual production capacity of RSPO-certified sustainable palm oil jumped over the 3 million tonnes mark last month, according to the Roundtable. Certification for green palm oil started in August 2008. "Many blue-chip companies are making statements that by 2015, they will use only certified palm," Ian McIntosh, president, west division at AAK, told Reuters on Friday. "We need to promote the reasons why plantations should pursue certification -- the principle reason is that the market expects and demands it," said McIntosh, who is currently the treasurer at the RSPO. "It has got to be 15 million tonnes." Palm oil is used in products such as food, cosmetics, tyres and biofuels, but the there has been weak demand for certified palm oil due to the higher cost involved. Palm oil planters have also complained that premiums for eco-friendly palm oil are not high enough to encourage production. Accusations from green groups over deforestation have led to some firms boycotting certain plantation companies. AAK recently sent an audit team to its supplier United Plantations , after a series of critical newspaper reports aimed at its working practices. The audit reported back in September and found no wrongdoing. "If we have specific reasons, we will on occasion go and audit plantations," McIntosh said, adding that no other AAK suppliers were currently under any audit or investigation. GREEN CERTIFICATES AAK refines vegetable oils, using raw materials mostly obtained from areas such Malaysia. The firm has also started up GreenPalm, a trading system where producers certified by the RSPO can sell certificates issued for a tonne of green palm oil to consumer firms and any individual. It aims to reward and encourage plantations to pursue RSPO certification, and has sold 1.1 million certificates since launch two years ago, with around 700,000 in 2010. An aerial view of a cleared forest area under development for palm oil plantations in Indonesia's central Kalimantan province - REUTERS/Crack Palinggi (Continued on page 14) 13 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 Green groups are saying that GreenPalm system does not encourage separate supply chains for green palm oil and not so green palm oil. "The criticism is that it is not ... segregated palm oil and it's true," said McIntosh, speaking ahead of the RSPO's annual meeting in Jakarta from Nov. 8-11. "But where segregated palm oil physically is not available -- it's a good alternative." On Friday, Malaysia's benchmark January palm oil futures ended at two-year highs at 3,007 Malaysian ringgit from 2,990 at Thursday's close. McIntosh, who was part of the RSPO organising committee for the RSPO in 2003, is bullish on prices going into 2011 due in part to population growth. "I don't see it coming down," he said. "If no double dip recession, no major custom duty changes or sudden shocks in China ... I would see an average next year of 3,200 (ringgit)." For its part, AAK is set to double its palm oil capacity in the United States from November next year. Globally, AAK will sell around 800,000 tonnes of palm oil, little-changed from last year, with a similar number forecast for 2011. "We have very ambitious plans," he added. "We are doubling our capacity in the U.S. in the anticipation that palm oil sales are going to continue to grow." GREENER PALM OIL NEEDS MORE ASIA SUPPORTUNILEVER By Michael Taylor LONDON, Oct 19 (Reuters) - Palm oil buyers in India and China need to join those in Europe in signing up for a certification scheme to promote sustainable palm oil, consumer goods giant Unilever said on Tuesday. The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) an industry body of consumers, green groups and plantation companies, was formed in 2004 and aims to promote growth and use of sustainable oil palm products. "We need to increase the uptake of certified oil in the market," Jan Kees Vis, global director sustainable sourcing development at Unilever told Reuters. "We know that the demand from Europe is not enough." plained that premiums for eco-friendly palm oil are not high enough to encourage production. "There is more production at the moment than there is demand and if that continues, the incentive for more growers to get certified will diminish," Vis said. "We need to get the Indian and the Chinese market involved, which is difficult to do." "We do need to involve more smallholder farmers," added Vis, speaking ahead of the RSPO's annual meeting in Jakarta from Nov. 8-11. SMART RESPONSE AWAITED Indonesia is the world's No. 2 producer of the vegetable oil. But accusations from green groups over deforestation have led to firms such as Burger King , Nestle and Unilever to stop buying palm oil from firms, such as PT SMART Tbk . In August, SMART, which is part of Singapore-listed Golden Agri-Resources , got a mixed score card in an independent environmental audit. Greenpeace has accused the palm oil giant of clearing peatland and forests with high conservation value that shelter endangered species. "The verification exercise was fine," said Vis. "We are waiting for a response from PT SMART -- a response in terms of an improvement plan or programme to be put in place. "So far, we're encouraged by the level of co-operation we see from PT SMART with certifiers and the willingness they have to communicate and discuss the findings." Vis added that Unilever would like to see Golden AgriResources become a member of RSPO, and make a public commitment to have all their holdings certified in a certain time-frame. Unilever expects to buy between 1.2 million and 1.5 million tonnes of palm oil this year, unchanged from 2009. "It is a real mixed (economic) picture, so the real trick for a company, is to allocate resources into the markets that show potential for growth," he said. "Palm oil is the cooking oil of the 2 billion poorest people on the planet. Population growth is going to happen, so that's where markets will grow -- Central Asia, Africa, South East Asia." Annual production capacity of RSPO-certified sustainable palm oil jumped over the 3 million tonnes mark last month, according to the Roundtable. Certification for green palm oil started in August 2008. [ID:nSGE62E0N0] "Global production is about 45 million tonnes -- India takes 8 million tonnes, China 7 million tonnes, Europe about 6 million tonnes, United States and Egypt 1 million tonnes," added Vis, who was elected to lead the RSPO at its conception in 2004. Unilever, the world's top palm oil buyer, uses palm oil for products like Dove soap and Stork margarine. The Anglo-Dutch firm said in April that it would more than double this year to 400,000 tonnes its purchases of palm oil production certified as sustainable. But the certified palm oil sector has been plagued by weak demand due to the higher cost involved. Palm oil planters have also com- REUTERS/Beawiharta 14 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 OIL PALM EXPANSION TO SLOW IN INDONESIA-DBS BANK NORWAY SAYS MORE AID NEEDED TO SAVE INDONESIAN FOREST KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 22 (Reuters) - Planters in Indonesia are likely to slow oil palm estate expansion thanks to a looming two-year ban on clearing forests and growing scrutiny by green groups and consumers, DBS Bank said on Friday. By Sunanda Creagh As a result, Malaysian and Indonesian planters will hold back on aggressive planting in 2010 and the years to come despite capital raising exercises last year to exploit low interest rates. DBS said these palm oil firms will stay away from peatlands and primary forests found within their land banks that are issued as location permits due to stricter government control. "For this reason, we assume only 60 percent of the initial location permit will eventually be developed, cut from our previous assumption of 80 percent," the bank's research arm said in a note to clients. Such a scenario may hurt long-term cash flows, growth and cap planters' values, the bank said. Following is a table by DBS on lowered expansion targets by Southeast Asian planters that have holdings in Indonesia: EXPANSION TARGET PLANTING new previous new SCHEDULE previous (in hectares) INDONESIA Astra Agro 49,300 49,300 FY10F-FY14F FY10F-FY14F London Sumatra 17,000 45,000 FY10F-FY14F FY10F-FY16F Sampoerna Agro 40,000 45,000 FY10F-FY15F FY10F-FY16F MALAYSIA Genting Plant 30,000 70,000 FY10F-FY12F FY10F-FY16F IJM Plant 28,000 23,000 FY10F-FY16F FY10F-FY15F IOI Corp 40,000 60,000 FY10F-FY14F FY10F-FY14F KL Kepong 15,000 15,000 FY10F-FY12F FY10F-FY12F Sime Darby 10,000 10,000 FY10F-FY12F FY10F-FY12F TSH Resources 31,000 38,500 FY10F-FY17F FY10F-FY20F SINGAPORE First Resources 38,000 50,000 FY10F-FY13F FY10F-FY15F Indofood Agri 90,000 135,000 FY10F-FY14F FY10F-FY16F Kencana Agri 66,000 66,000 FY10F-FY20F FY10F-FY20F 143,000 FY10F-FY20F FY10F-FY20F 213,000 Wilmar JAKARTA, Oct 25 (Reuters) - Indonesia could match Brazil's success in slowing deforestation but needs far more aid from rich nations such as the United States, Japan and the European Union, Norway's environment minister said on Monday. Norway has signed a $1 billion climate deal with Indonesia, under which Jakarta has agreed to impose a two-year ban on new permits to clear natural forests. Norway has already released $30 million of the funds, with the bulk to be paid out later after Indonesia proves greenhouse gas emissions have gone down and an independent audit is done. But more aid is needed to save Indonesia's forests, said Norwegian environment minister Erik Solheim. "$1 billion is a huge amount of money but Indonesia needs quite substantially more to be able to conserve and sustainably manage its forests," Solheim told Reuters in an interview in Jakarta, where he is meeting Indonesian officials. "The United States should come in, Japan, other European nations could come into this scheme to make it robust enough." So far, Norway has been the biggest donor to protect tropical forests. At last year's Copenhagen climate summit, the United States, Australia, France, Japan, Britain and Norway agreed to provide a combined $3.5 billion from 2010-12 to help save forests. Total pledges by rich donor nations rose to $4 billion in May, when members of a forest partnership met in Oslo. Indonesia's vast tropical forests soak up enormous amounts of greenhouse gases but are threatened by agriculture and biofuel cultivation. Worldwide, deforestation is responsible for up to a fifth of all greenhouse gas emissions from human sources, according to U.N. data. "The logic in the past was that you can make money from destroying the forest, you cannot make money from protecting the forest. That logic must be changed," said Solheim. Oil-rich Norway has also allocated $250 million and $1 billion to forest conservation projects in Guyana and Brazil respectively. "Brazil has reduced its deforestation rate by 80 percent from 2003 until 2010. That's a fantastic result. I think the prospects for Indonesia are of the same magnitude," he said. Solheim said it was up to Indonesia, not Norway, to define which forests would be saved under the moratorium or whether existing permits to clear valuable forest would be honoured. "If Indonesia came to Norway to tell us how to do our oil and gas production, Norwegians would laugh," he said. (Continued on page 16) 15 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 Palm oil firms such as Wilmar , SMART and Indofood Agri Resources have big expansion plans and vast land banks in Indonesia, the world's biggest producer of the oil used in cosmetics, ice cream and other products. While Indonesian officials have said they would prefer for the $1 billion to be handled by an internationally reputable Indonesian institution, Solheim said Norway preferred an international institution such as the World Bank. "This is a matter we have to discuss with the government of Indonesia," he said. MARKET-BASED OFFSETS DISTANT Part of Norway's donation will be used to set aside forests for pilot projects under a planned U.N-backed forest carbon offset scheme, called reduced emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD). So far, most REDD pilot projects are funded by governments. A market-based REDD scheme -- under which rich polluters could offset their emissions by paying poor countries not to chop down their trees -- was a distant prospect, Solheim said. "That may come in 10 years time or so. It's much more likely we will get a market-based system in other areas such as energy," he said. "Some who are arguing that it should not be market-based can sleep peacefully because we are very far from a market-based system. Every single cent will come from taxpayers." REUTERS SUMMIT-WILMAR SAYS NO MAJOR IMPACT FROM MORATORIUM For other news from the Reuters Global Climate and Alternative Energy Summit, click on: ( http://www.reuters.com/summit/ GlobalClimateandAlternativeEnergy10?pid=500 ) By David Fogarty and Niluksi Koswanage SINGAPORE/KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 12 (Reuters) - Wilmar International , the world's No.1 palm oil firm, expects Indonesia's proposed two-year ban on clearing forests to have a limited impact on its operations as land available for oil palm estates is ample. Singapore-listed Wilmar's stand run counter to many palm oil and mining firms who fear the moratorium -- part of a $1 billion deal with Norway aimed at fighting deforestation and carbon emissions -- will curb expansion and future earnings. degraded but the question of who pays for this remains unsettled. Goon said Wilmar would abide by any regulations that governed land swaps if such rules were drafted. Indonesia is under international pressure to slow deforestation and the destruction of peatlands, which release vast amounts of planet-warming greenhouse gases when cleared or burned. Wilmar also faces an uphill task in ensuring its palm oil supply comes from third-party estates that have not illegally cut down forests or drained peatlands to expand, Goon said. "NOT THE PALM OIL POLICE" Less than half of the palm oil the firm trades comes from its own subsidiaries, Goon said. But unlike companies such as Malaysian-listed planter IOI Corp , which recently excluded an Indonesian supplier over concerns of deforestation, Goon said Wilmar usually engages with errant planters to help them become more ecofriendly. "First of all, we are not the palm oil police," Goon said. "If the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil either suspends or terminates a member that would prompt us to review our relationship with the company," he said, referring to industry-driven body tasked with certifying planters. Goon, an RSPO board member, said Wilmar planned to expand its investments in cutting carbon emissions and would spend between $12 million and $15 million in 2010/11 on projects around East Asia. A total of 18 projects were at various stages of development. The company already had six projects registered under a U.N.-backed clean energy scheme that rewards investors with tradeable carbon offsets and focused on capturing methane, a powerful greenhouse gas, by treating palm oil mill waste water. He said projects developed or planned also included burning palm biomass and rice husk waste in boilers to generate power, cutting fuel bills and reducing emissions. "There are quite a few in process now and we will be rolling out a number for the next 5 to 10 years," he added. He also said the industry was far different than it was a decade ago, with clear rules and standards under the RSPO and Wilmar's Head of Corporate Social Responsibility Jeremy Goon said oil palm concessions only cover 3.2 percent of Indonesia's land mass but contribute 70 percent of total agriculture activity in the Southeast Asian country. "We understand there is sufficient non-forest degraded lands in Indonesia to accommodate and support the growth of the plantation businesses," Goon told the Reuters Climate and Alternative Energy Summit. Under the deal with Norway, the moratorium would apply from the start of next year but exactly which areas of forest will be covered remains unclear, unsettling investors. Senior Indonesia officials have raised the idea of land swaps to help palm oil firms expand on land already An aerial view shows a truck carrying logs of wood in a forest in Indonesia's Sumatra island. Indonesia's plans to halt forest clearing will slow the aggressive expansion of plantation firms in the world's top palm oil producer, leading to higher costs as firms will need acquisitions or improved yields to boost growth. - REUTERS/Beawiharta (Continued on page 17) 16 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 other bodies. Green groups have targetted palm oil and logging firms for cutting down large areas of forest, destroying pristine rainforests brimming with plant and animal species. But he said firms under the RSPO must complete detailed assessments of any pockets of forest with a high conservation value in plantation concessions. Social impact assessments were also crucial before development of any lands. "The lands that are normally awarded by governments to palm oil companies are usually degraded, logged-over secondary forest. They usually only give pristine rainforest with commercially viable timber to logging companies and that's just the way it is," he said. INDONESIAN FIRM EYES FIRST GREEN PALM PRODUCT SALE JAKARTA, Oct 8 (Reuters) - Indonesian palm oil firm PT Megasurya Mas is in talks with a Dutch buyer to sell the country's first shipment of a palm oil-based product certified as sustainable, a company executive said on Friday. Pressure is growing on Indonesian palm oil firms after accusations from green groups over deforestation have led to firms such as Burger King , Nestle and Unilever to stop buying palm oil from PT SMART Tbk . PT Megasurya Mas, a unit of palm oil firm Musim Mas that is owned by the Karim family, expects to sell soap made from palm oil that is certified by the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), said Wibowo Suryadinata, Megasurya's general manager. "The premium will be about 5 percent higher than the price for non-RSPO," Suryadinata said, adding a deal was expected within two to three months. He said this would be the first sale of a RSPO certified palm oil product from the world's largest palm oil producer. "We're taking benefits from being the first," he said, adding he expected it to drive profit growth. production. The industry has been locked in a dispute with green groups following accusations it has cleared peatland and high-conservation value forests that shelter endangered species and trap climate-warming gases. SUSTAINABLE PALM OIL BODY CENSURES INDONESIA'S PT SMART By Sunanda Creagh JAKARTA, Sept 23 (Reuters) - An industry body for sustainable palm oil has made its first public censure of a member, saying Indonesia's PT SMART Tbk breached its principles and may face sanctions, and also ticked off the firm's parent. SMART last month released an independent audit after Greenpeace alleged SMART bulldozed high conservation value forests and damaged carbon-rich peatlands. The audit gave SMART a mixed score card, highlighting some instances in which Indonesia's environmental laws were breached. The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) -- an industry body of planters, green groups and consumers -said on its website its grievance panel had written to SMART and Golden Agri censuring the firms for the breaches uncovered by the audit. SMART is a member of the RSPO but Golden AgriResources (GAR) is not. "In its letter to SMART and GAR, the panel finds there has been serious non-compliance with the RSPO code of conduct, specifically a failure by SMART to work towards implementation and certification of the RSPO principles and criteria," it said. In particular, RSPO principles on social and environmental impact assessments and peatland management have been infringed, it said. "Members who have been found to not be in compliance and who continue to be in non-compliance with the RSPO regulations could ultimately face sanctions, including the suspension and, eventually, the termination, of their membership of the RSPO." The comments may be a blow to SMART's aims to win back big palm oil buyers including Burger King Holdings , Nestle and Unilever , who have said they will stop buying from SMART because of environmental concerns. The RSPO also urged GAR to stop publicly suggesting it was in the process of obtaining RSPO certification. "GAR is not a member of the RSPO, nor has the RSPO yet received a membership application from the company. The Panel encourages GAR to submit a full and complete application for membership," the statement said. REUTERS/Crack Palinggi The RSPO, an industry body of consumers, green groups and plantation companies, was formed in 2004 and aims to promote growth and use of sustainable oil palm products. It forecast production of ecofriendly palm oil may double to 3 million tonnes by the end of this year. But planters have complained that premiums for ecofriendly palm oil are not high enough to encourage SMART said in a statement it would work toward the requirements set by the RSPO, including environmental impact assessments and conservation of deep peatlands. Enormous amounts of climate-warming gases are released when deep peatlands are disturbed, and the deforestation of Indonesia's extensive tropical forests led the World Bank to name it the world's number three emitter in a 2007 report. 17 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 MALAYSIA'S IOI SAYS PALM PRICES TO STAY STRONG By Fong Min Hun PUTRAJAYA, Malaysia, Nov 12 (Reuters) - Palm oil prices will extend their rally into mid-2011 after touching their highest level in over two years, the world's third largest listed producer of the vegetable oil said. "We are optimistic that the strong price trend (of 3,000 ringgit per tonne) will continue up to the middle of 2011," Lee Yeow Chor, executive director of Malaysia's IOI Corp said in an interview. "It will certainly be very positive for IOI for our current financial year ending June 2011." Environmentalists have attacked expansion plans by planters in Indonesia, the world's largest palm oil exporter, because of deforestation that leads to greenhouse gas emissions and wildlife destruction, leading to pressure on growers to certify their palm oil as sustainable. Bangun said major palm oil consumers such as Unilever , Nestle and Burger King , who have stopped buying from Indonesia's PT SMART because of environmental concerns, should outline their plans to consume sustainable palm oil. "Supply of green palm oil is available but it's lacking buyers. That's causing prices to gradually fall," he said. Lee said near-term prospects were rosy for IOI, as it would also benefit from the commissioning of two new specialty fats plants, one last July and another next March. For a PDF on palm and the environment, click: Palm prices have surged since the end of August on a global commodities rally and peaked at a two-year high of 3,452 ringgit ($1,109) per tonne on Thursday. IOI, an integrated palm player, is the second largest palm company in Malaysia after Sime Darby . Annual production capacity of green palm oil jumped to over three million tonnes last month, or 6.6 percent of global palm oil production of 45 million tonnes, but sales of the oil have been slow. Certification of for green palm oil started two years ago, aimed at preserving forests and protecting local communities. IOI is also a charter member of the Roundtable Summit on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), an industry body promoting sustainable palm development. IOI has 30 percent of its units RSPO-certified while another 30 percent has been audited and awaits certification. RSPO-certified palm oil premiums now stand at $3-$5 compared to $50 at end-2008. Planters have complained that the lower premiums will not encourage the production of sustainably produced palm oil. IOI has produced 900,000 tonnes of RSPO-certified palm oil to date, but Lee is not happy with the premiums being paid for green palm, which is more expensive to produce. The requirement for consumers to report their sustainable palm oil intake will be submitted to the RSPO meeting next year to get approval for a one-year trial period, before full implementation in 2012, Bangun said. "We have, since 2009, a fair volume of sustainable palm oil and it is disappointing we have not received the support that we were expecting," he said. Lee also said that some non-governmental organisations' allegations that IOI's practices were environmentally unfriendly "had basis" while others were not true. "We are against...(NGOs) picking up on selective incidences to ridicule and undermine the reputation of the company," Lee said. "We welcome exchanging findings, and hope that we are allowed time to investigate." IOI had last July stopped buying palm oil from PT SMART after the Indonesian planter received a mixed score card on an environmental survey. RSPO ASKS PALM OIL BUYERS TO PLAN GREEN PALM DEMAND ( http://r.reuters.com/hej64n ) Members of the RSPO have also agreed to review in January a proposed new planting policy which growers say may disrupt long-term operational plans. Dubbed the New Planting Procedure (NPP), the policy requires planters to address all grievances prior to commencing operations in a new area, a move that may slow expansion. "The main concern from growers around planting procedures is that it is difficult to implement within the current legal frameworks," RSPO chairman Jan Vis Kees told reporters. The planting procedure overlaps with local regulations. Many firms still have ambition expansion plans, though a planned government moratorium on new permits to clear natural forest from next year may also limit the industry expansion. By Fitri Wulandari JAKARTA, Nov 12 (Reuters) - An industry body that set up standards for green palm oil output said that in order to boost sales, buyers should specify end uses for the product. The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), an industry body of consumers, green groups and plantation companies that aims to promote use of sustainable oil palm products, is trying to balanced increased pressure on growers by giving them clearer forecasts from potential buyers. "Growers want a fair treatment. If we have to report our plan to certify production, consumers must have similar obligations," said Derom Bangun, vice president of the RSPO, on the sidelines of an RSPO meeting in Jakarta. First delivery of the First RSPO-certified sustainable palm oil to end-users in Rotterdam- REUTERS/Jerry Lampen 18 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 Q+A-WHY HAS SOUTHEAST ASIA'S HAZE RETURNED? By Nopporn Wong-Anan SINGAPORE, Oct 22 (Reuters) - Fires set off to clear forest illegally on Indonesia's Sumatra island are sending clouds of haze across the Malacca Strait to neighbouring Malaysia and Singapore, causing the worst air pollution since 2006. Apart from being a health hazard, the haze can inflict economic costs by scaring off tourists and disrupting transport and farming. WHY IS IT HAPPENING? Forest fires are a regular occurrence during the dry season in areas such as the Indonesian island of Sumatra but the situation has been aggravated in recent decades as timber and plantation firms, as well as farmers, start fires to clear land. Indonesia has a long history of weak forestry law enforcement and illegal land clearing by palm oil developers is common. Fires clear land quickly and reduce the acidity of peatland soil, but they release vast amounts of greenhouse gases into the air. The fires come ahead of an Indonesian plan to impose a two-year moratorium on new permits to clear natural forest from 2011 as planters are looking to expand plantations on the back of rising prices.. The fires are expected to burn as planters rush to grab land ahead of the moratorium. Another part of the problem is under ground. Southeast Asia hosts 60 percent of the world's tropical peatlands, most of it in Indonesia. Peat soil is made up of decomposed plant material that burns easily. Peat fires are hard to put out as they can smoulder underground and resurface, and produce thick haze and a high amount of carbon. Because of weather patterns, smoke from the fires often blows into nearby countries, although Indonesia's own most populous island of Java, where the country's capital, Jakarta, is located, is generally little affected. HOW BAD IS IT THIS YEAR? In Singapore, a pollution index rose to an "unhealthy" level on Thursday. Malaysia's index rose to a "hazardous" level the previous day. The haze has brought poor visibility for ships in the Malacca Strait, forced hundreds of schools in Malaysia's southern Johor state to close and shrouded Singapore's regional financial district in mist and smoke. The situation improved slightly on Friday. WHEN WAS THE WORST? The worst haze hit in 1997-98, when drought caused by the El Nino weather pattern led to big Indonesian fires. The smoke spread to Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand and cost more than $9 billion in damage to tourism, transport and farming. More than 9 million hectares (22 million acres) of land were burnt, 6.5 million of which were forested areas. The fire produced an estimated 1 billion to 2 billion tonnes of carbon. WHAT IS THE REGION TRYING TO DO? Spurred on by the 1997-98 fires, Southeast Asian countries signed an Agreement on Transboundary Haze Pollution in 2002, but it has been toothless since Indonesia, the source of most of the smoke, has yet to ratify it. The pact calls for signatories to work closely in monitoring, mitigating and taking preventive measures in combating transboundary haze. Government agencies in neighbouring countries have from time to time offered to help Indonesia fight the fires -- for example by sending water-dumping aircraft and fire fighters or providing satellite technology to map fires -- but Jakarta has not always accepted the help. WHAT IS THE DIPLOMATIC FALLOUT? The haze and its health and economic costs can strain the region's generally good ties. The haze returned less than a week after Southeast Asian environment ministers met in Brunei to address the fires. For now, Malaysian and Singaporean cabinet ministers have been measured in their response, telling Indonesian counterparts of their concern and offering to help. Q+A-HAS THE GREEN CAMPAIGN HURT SE ASIA'S PALM OIL SECTOR? By Niluksi Koswanage KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 21 (Reuters) - Non-governmental organisations have put more pressure on Southeast Asia's palm oil industry to become environmentally friendly by convincing consumers to shun suppliers that cut forests to expand estates. The impact of the green campaign on the industry will be a key issue for the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil -- an industry driven body tasked with certifying the vegetable oil as eco-friendly -- when it meets in Indonesia on Nov. 8-11. Here are some questions and answers on the issue: WHAT HAVE GREEN GROUPS ACHIEVED SO FAR? A strong green lobby has convinced EU lawmakers to impose rules preventing palm-biofuels from top producers Indonesia and Malaysia from entering the market, a move seen by palm oil firms as an informal trade barrier in favour of EU oilseed producers. The focus has since shifted to consumer products in a big way since 2009, which is harder for palm oil firms to ignore. Indonesia's SMART had to clear itself of allegations of forest clearing with an audit after buyers like Unilever and Nestle scrapped supply ties with company following Greenpeace claims of environmental damage. WHAT HAS HAPPENED TO EUROPEAN DEMAND FOR PALM OIL? Overall, EU actions against palm's conversion into biofuels keeps the bloc well behind top buyers India and China and encourage these two Asian giants to consumer more and lift the market. So if green campaigners want to make an impact, they need to persuade price-sensitive India and China to limit their use of palm oil, the world's cheapest cooking oil, and become more environmentally conscious. WILL NGO ACTION AFFECT PALM OIL FUTURES AND CASH MARKETS? It is not the case for benchmark Malaysian futures as Asian demand patterns, the soy crop progress in the Americas and weather concerns drive the market. But it's a different story for the physical market, especially Indonesian crude palm oil. Under NGO pressure, Malaysia's No. 2 palm oil firm and trader IOI stopped sourcing from SMART's parent Golden Agri in July and had to pay more for Indonesian cargoes from other suppliers, a move that pushed prices up by 10 percent. If more traders single out SMART and Golden Agri, they risk dealing with tighter supply and much higher prices as both firms make up a third of Indonesian output. HOW ABOUT THE INDUSTRY'S EXPANSION PLANS? The industry says the rate of oil palm estate expansion in Indonesia has slowed to 250,000 hectares per annum from 600,000 hectares at the height of the palm oil price boom in 2007-2008 thanks to greater scrutiny by consumers and NGOs. But the impact to supply will not be felt in the next five to six years as many foreign and local planters in Indonesia have not used up their huge landbanks. Any future land expansions may come in the form of acquisitions in the sector as soaring palm oil prices provide strong cash backing. The world's No. 1 planter Wilmar took that route. In August, it bought a 20 percent share in Kencana Agri that has planted only a fifth of its landbank. Wilmar told Reuters in a recent interview that there was sufficient non-forest, degraded land to accommodate the growth of the plantation business despite Indonesia's proposed two year ban on forest clearing. 19 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 CHINA'S SOY BUYING SPREE TO CURB VEGOIL IMPORTS By Niluksi Koswanage KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 28 (Reuters) - China's soybean imports smash records every year but if the country keeps up last week's pace of buying, its processors will have more than enough to crush into cooking oil, reducing imports of edible oil. The world's No. 1 food buyer may be rewriting its shopping list at a time when a weaker dollar makes bumper soy crops from the Americas cheaper than processed soyoil from Argentina as well as Malaysian and Indonesian palm oil. More Chinese soy crushing will cut edible oil imports by 5 percent to 7 percent, to about 6.3 million to 6.4 million tonnes for the marketing year to September 2011, Reuters calculations based on industry estimates show. The scenario provides a bearish counterpoint to increasing U.S. soyoil prices as South American biofuel mandates suck up more edible oil and Malaysian palm oil prices climb on low yields after this year's erratic weather. "Export supplies for vegetable oils are not increasing from the Chinese point of view and they are depending more on soybean imports to meet cooking oil demand," said Thomas Mielke, who heads oilseed research house Oil World. China's soy buying in the new marketing year has taken on more urgency than ever, partly driven by a delayed Brazilian soy crop and concerns over growing food inflation after Lunar New Year holidays in February. U.S. sales data shows China snapped up 1.45 million tonnes of U.S. soybeans last week, more than doubling its purchases from the week to Oct. 15, and the highest so far for the U.S. marketing year that started on Sept. 1. The additional demand prompted the China National Grain and Oils Information Centre (CNGOIC) to revise soy import estimates to 54 million tonnes in the new marketing year, or a jump of 7.2 percent from 2009/2010. "If soybean stocks increase by about 5 million tonnes due to the buying, it means at least 1 million tonnes more soyoil," said a trader in Shanghai. "The margins will go beyond 500 yuan and shrink a little at the end of this year but it will be good margins for some time because domestic soyoil and soymeal prices are high," said Frank Chen, a Shanghai-based analyst with Pacific Epoch Futures. WEATHER TRIGGERS THE PANIC BUTTON Traders say China may cut vegetable oil purchases by at least 700,000 tonnes of mainly refined palm olein from Southeast Asia, taking the edge off Malaysian palm oil futures that hit two month highs this week on the falling dollar. Although some refining capacity will turn idle, crude palm oil supply may get a breather since the Malaysian yield recovery will stay fragile until the first quarter of 2011 after the El Nino-driven drought this year. La Nina, which comes on the heels of El Nino and brings heavier rains to Southeast Asia, could also curb supplies as prolonged exposure to moisture rots palm fruits and floods complicate transport. Weather triggers the panic button for China. In late 2007, La Nina driven floods in Malaysia and Indonesia set off a scramble for supplies among Chinese traders that powered Malaysian palm oil futures to a record high of 4,486 ringgit. This time the scramble has entered the soybean space with Chinese orders for U.S. cargoes soaring as La Nina brings drier weather to South America, delaying plantings, mostly in Brazil. "If La Nina leads to crop failure, the Chinese would be seen as taking a precautionary step rather than a gamble because the dollar could slide even further and make new cargoes cheaper," said a plantation analyst with a Singaporean investment bank. Soaring U.S. soy futures have lifted the soyoil market to two year highs this week on strong Chinese demand but although China's vegetable oil purchases may slow in the future, higher South American biofuel mandates will prop up prices. "Soyoil will widen its premium to palm oil to $100 after trading in tandem in August," said a regional vegetable oil trader in Malaysia. "It's more because of the huge demand for soybeans than the mandates, but who knows, that may kick in some demand for palm oil later on." SHIFT TO OILSEEDS DOES THE PALM OIL PARTY END AT 3,000 RINGGIT? China's shift to cheaper soy from pricier edible oils will be a big step forward in reining in a growing agricultural trade deficit that hit $11.3 billion in the first half of 2010, almost double the same period last year, according to official data. By Niluksi Koswanage Taxes on imports and massive expansion of soy crushing facilities also reflect that goal. Customs impose 9 percent duties on palm oil and soyoil but just 3 percent for soybeans. In the past, importers were willing to brave that mechanism when soy supplies tightened and cooking oil demand surged. "This year, more importers are going to be cognisant of the fact that they will get more discounts by adhering to the tax structure," said a trader with a Singaporean trading house that ships soy products to China. "The higher soyoil and palm oil prices are a little unattractive with inflation on the rise," the trader said, referring to last month's annual inflation that rose to a 23-month high at 3.6 percent. China's lower participation in edible oil markets may pose a setback for overseas processing sectors, but the blistering rise in soy imports will slowly crank up its 100 million tonne crushing capacity, of which half lies idle. [ID:nTOE60P01M] It mostly has to do with the promise of higher margins. The CGNOIC said Chinese traders were buying South American crops forward with crushing profit of 302 yuan per tonne -- the highest this year, and traders expect it to rise further. KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 15 (Reuters) - Malaysian palm oil futures look likely to revisit the 3,000 ringgit ($973.4) level hit two years ago as global vegetable oil supply concerns grow and the U.S. dollar weakens. But could the party end abruptly for palm oil, which has surged almost 24 percent so far in the second half of 2010? Palm oil has been riding high since a drought hit oilseed crops in the Black Sea region in July and August, getting an extra fillip this week when the U.S. government surprisingly cut its estimates for what was expected to be a bumper soy crop. The third month contract on Bursa Malaysia rose 19 ringgit to 2,935 ringgit a tonne on Friday, just off the two-year high of 2,970 ringgit hit the previous day. GET OUT NOW? Agricultural markets overreacted to the U.S. soybean crop estimate cut, an analyst at a Malaysian brokerage said. "The production numbers are still fluid and the soy harvest is picking up very fast," said Alvin Tai, an analyst with OSK Investment Bank. Tai expects palm oil prices to ease off in the near term and fall in the first quarter of 2011 as the market begins to factor in strong output from top supplier Indonesia. 20 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 Malaysia should see higher production from October due to the seasonal uptick in yields. The surge in palm oil prices may see demand rationing kick in, and the market is vulnerable to a setback before attracting more orders, said Thomas Mielke, head of Hamburg-based research house Oil World. "We do not rule out the palm oil complex coming under temporary pressure," Mielke said. "It is possible to do some profit taking and make some technical adjustments." JUMP RIGHT IN? Some say a correction in palm oil will be brief but a supply deficit in global vegetable oil markets when top buyers China, India and Pakistan are restocking after festivals in August to October will see a renewed rally. This scenario loosely mirrors the grain markets, said Doug Whitehead, an analyst with Rabobank in London. "We are not seeing demand rationing in the agriculture markets despite the price rallies. China bought more soybeans this week, Iraq bought more wheat," he said. Weather conditions could be the wild card. "Weather has the potential to reduce supply of vegetable oils," said Martin Bek-Nielsen, executive director of Malaysian-listed United Plantations . He was referring to the La Nina weather condition that brings heavy rains to palm-producing Southeast Asia and triggers dry spells in soy-exporting South America, curbing supplies. "The market is going to trade between 2,800 and 3,300 ringgit in the next 3-6 months," he said. "Technical play is very strong and we could be bouncing between 3,000 to 3,200 ringgit soon." Analysts said firms with a lack of land reserves such as Jakarta's biggest listed planter PT Astra Agro Lestari risk slower profit growth and reduced market share, while smaller players such as Gozco Plantation may be forced to merge or become takeover targets. "In the short term, the moratorium will be bad for plantation firms as plans to grow landbank will be limited, and firms with small landbanks will find it especially hard to expand," said Kenny Suyatman, fund manager at PT Mandiri Manejemen Investasi. The fund manages $1.9 billion in assets including stakes in London Sumatra and Sampoerna Agro . Firms with the smallest unplanted landbanks include BW Plantations and Bakrie Sumatra , while Wilmar and Indofood Agri have the biggest Indonesian landbank. The ban by Southeast Asia's biggest economy follows a $1 billion climate aid deal Indonesia signed with Norway aimed at avoiding greenhouse emissions from deforestation. Palm oil buyers Unilever and Nestle have halted supply contracts with Indonesian palm oil giant PT SMART Tbk and agribusiness giant Cargill is conducting a review following reports from Greenpeace alleging SMART destroyed carbon-rich rainforests. Regional planters rapidly expanded in recent years as a rally in crude palm oil prices (CPO) was driven by growing demand from Asia and Europe for an oil used to make products from biscuits to biodiesel. But easy land expansion may be over. "NGO pressures may become too intense for big cap planters to expand through new planting. The big cap planters may prefer to buy existing estates or firms," said Ivy Ng Lee Fang, a plantation analyst at CIMB Investment Bank Berhad in Kualu Lumpur, pointing to BW and Sampoerna Agro as possible targets. Consolidation in the industry may be beginning. Sources told Reuters on Wednesday that Wilmar plans to buy a 20 percent stake in Indonesian firm Kencana Agri , which also has a relatively high unplanted landbank. Gozco, which has among the largest land reserves among small caps, said that firms from Europe, Singapore, India, China plus U.S. agribusiness giant Cargill [CARG.UL] had expressed interest in taking a stake or partnering it. The moratorium is creating a perception of land scarcity in Indonesia, said an industry source that does land acquisition deals for Southeast Asian planters. "Planters are talking to us about either expanding west to Africa or going east to Papua New Guinea," said the source, who declined to be identified. "The moratorium, if put in place, will see land prices rise by 30-50 percent from current levels." ACQUISITIONS OR RESEARCH INDONESIA FOREST MORATORIUM TO STYMIE PALM OIL FIRMS By Janeman Latul and Neil Chatterjee JAKARTA, Aug 12 (Reuters) - Indonesia's plans to halt forest clearing will slow the aggressive expansion of plantation firms in the world's top palm oil producer, leading to higher costs as firms will need acquisitions or improved yields to boost growth. The two-year moratorium on new permits to clear natural forest from 2011 will increase land prices, pushing some to consider following industry leader Wilmar in expanding overseas to Africa or to diversify into food crops. Indonesia is regarded as a key player in the fight to slow climate change because its tropical forests and carbon-rich peatlands trap huge amounts of carbon dioxide but its rapid deforestation rate has sparked concern among environmentalists. This is not good for Astra Agro, whose trees are ageing -- at an average of 15 years old versus an optimum fruit-bearing age of 7-18 years -- meaning it needs to plant soon. Suyatman sees it losing out from the moratorium and has cut his holding. Astra Agro expects its expansion to be restricted by the forest moratorium, with output flat this year. Its stock has slipped 10 percent this year, underperforming a 19 percent rally in the Jakarta index, and with a price to earnings ratio of 19.4 is still seen as overvalued by many. Land surveys that used to take a few days now take weeks, leading to higher fees, given more stringent environmental criteria, the firm said. It is now looking at expanding in neighbouring Papua New Guinea instead. If environmental concerns do restrict future supply of palm oil, investors say higher CPO prices could be a comfort for strong players, given a healthy demand outlook. Analysts in a Reuters poll saw steady CPO prices next year. 21 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 Those firms able to tap that demand through better yields may be winners. Alfi Fadhliyah, a plantation analyst at PT Bahana Securities, picked out London Sumatra and Sampoerna Agro because of high quality seeds as a result of research and a young tree age -- a combination that should boost future yields. London Sumatra, whose CEO told Reuters the moratorium will be a "temporary shock" for the industry, has an average tree age of 11 years. "We like London Sumatra because it could have higher yields among its peers as its trees are at a prime age for palm oil, which could help the company benefit during the moratorium period," said Winston Sual, fund manager at the $108 million top performing Indonesian fund Panin Dana Maxima. EUROPE EYES MORE PALM OIL AS DROUGHT SAPS SUPPLIES By Niluksi Koswanage and Naveen Thukral KUALA LUMPUR/SINGAPORE, Aug 18 (Reuters) - European consumers will be forced to boost shipments of palm oil, despite a vigorous campaign by green groups against it, after a drought that shrivelled oilseed crops across the Black Sea region. Palm oil futures on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange climbed to a 15-month top last week and the market could be set for further gains as European consumers scurry for supplies to satisfy demand from the food and fuel sectors. A storm could be brewing in global vegetable oil markets, analysts say, although not on the scale seen in U.S. wheat futures, which surged to two-year highs this month. "Europe's rapeseed crop was lower than expected and Ukraine is going to have a very limited supply available for exports," said Doug Whitehead, a commodities analyst at Rabobank in London. "It really means that rapeseed oil supplies will be very much constrained, so it is likely we will see palm oil moving as a substitute." Hamburg-based analysts OilWorld forecast the European Union's palm oil demand to rise 4.4 percent to 5.7 million tonnes in the oil marketing year to September 2010, making the region the No.3 buyer after India and China. "We expect to see some new orders coming in this week onwards to about September or October," said a trader with a Singapore-listed planter who deals with European buyers. "Inquiries are there and sentiment is positive. European customers will buy on small dips in the current palm oil rally. They don't want to be caught off guard." In the Rotterdam cash market, palm oil was up 11 percent in August, while its discount to rapeseed oil has widened to more than $175 a tonne from an average of $75 in the second quarter, making palm oil a cheaper substitute. "The law of economics will pull the cheapest oil into the European food market and palm oil's widening discount to rapeseed makes that happen," said Dorab Mistry, head of trading for Indian firm Godrej's international arm. European buyers may have to push environment issues linked to palm oil on the back burner as they struggle with lower domestic supplies, although top importers will be unwilling to take shipments from firms accused of destroying rainforests to expand palm estates. "For major consumers like Germany sustainability is important, but we are going to see increased flows of palm oil as there are not enough edible oil sources," said Standard Chartered analyst Abah Ofon. "We continue to be bullish on palm oil as we feel global consumption of edible oils is going to outstrip supplies in the coming year." Environmentalists say palm oil's use in biofuels has triggered a land grab at the expense of rainforests and peatlands -- a campaign that largely limited its use in the sector. Rapeseed oil is mostly channeled to biofuels, leaving palm oil for the food sector and green groups have persuaded Unilever and Nestle to scrap supply contracts with some planters. Some traders say European firms may import more soyoil to avoid a backlash from environment-conscious consumers while a more compelling reason points to prospects of bumper soy crops from the Americas. "Even if soyoil is taken up rather than palm oil, there will be a ripple effect as soyoil will come up short," said Kuala Lumpur-based Citi analyst Penny Yaw. "Countries that usually import soyoil will then have to rely on palm oil. Somehow, palm oil will benefit," said the analyst, referring to India, which shifted some demand to soyoil in early 2010 when palm oil rallied on hot weather hurting output. Palm oil production will also be affected by changes in global weather. Prices have also risen on the back of the brewing La Ninadriven rains that may disrupt harvesting in the world's top producers Indonesia and Malaysia in the short term but could boost output in 2011 and staunch the European oilseed decline. The Indonesian Palm Oil Association said crude palm oil output may grow at a slower pace of 4.5-5.0 percent this year as prolonged rains hit yields. Malaysia's commodities ministry has revised its palm oil output forecast this year to 17.8 million tonnes from 18.1 million on prospects of wetter weather. INDONESIA'S MAIN PALM OIL FIRMS That coincides with expectations for the European Union's rapeseed crop to fall 7.8 percent to 19.9 million tonnes in 2010 from a year ago while Ukraine's sunflower crop may drop 2.7 percent to 7.1 million tonnes, OilWorld data showed. Excessive rains are likely to cut canola production in Canada, reducing exports nearly 20 percent to 6 million tonnes. TRADERS BRACE FOR DEALS Data from cargo surveyors shows that demand for Malaysian palm oil from the region has outpaced India and China so far in August, and traders expect more. By Fitri Wulandari JAKARTA, Aug 10 (Reuters) - An audit of Indonesian palm oil giant PT SMART Tbk has found the firm did not destroy primary forest but did plant on carbon-rich deep peatlands, partially clearing it of accusations by Greenpeace. While SMART said the independent report showed a campaign by Greenpeace was exaggerated or wrong, the audit said the firm's planting of deep peatlands -- which trap greenhouse gases -- on two estates contravened Indonesian and SMART's own rules. 22 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil November 2010 Environmentalists have for years expressed concerns over Indonesia's palm oil producers having cleared forests to expand their plantations. Palm oil plantations cover a total of 7.9 million hectares -- roughly 80 times the area of Cambodia's Angkor Wat temple complex. Below are key facts and figures for Indonesia's major palm oil plantation firms. * PT SMART & GOLDEN AGRI-RESOURCES Jakarta-listed PT SMART and its Singapore-listed parent Golden Agri-Resources together run 427,253 hectares of palm oil plantations in Sumatra, Kalimantan, and Papua. SMART runs Golden Agri's Indonesian palm oil operations. The group is controlled by the Widjaja family which has interests in pulp and paper, finance and property. The groups produced 1.913 million tonnes of crude palm oil in 2009, up 13 percent from 2008. * PT ASTRA AGRO LESTARI Astra Agro Lestari , Indonesia's biggest listed palm oil plantation firm, has 264,036 hectares of palm oil plantations in Sumatra, Kalimantan, and Sulawesi. Astra Agro, which is owned by Indonesia's biggest car dealer PT Astra International Tbk , produced 1.083 million tonnes of crude palm oil in 2009, up 10 percent from 2008. * PT PERUSAHAAN PERKEBUNAN LONDON SUMATRA PT Perusahaan Perkebunan London Sumatra Indonesia , or Lonsum, has total palm oil plantations of more than 75,000 hectares. Set up over a century ago by London-based Harrisons & Crossfield Plc, it has palm oil operations in North Sumatra, South Sumatra, and East Kalimantan. Lonsum, a subsidiary of Singapore-listed Indofood Agri Resources Ltd , produced 377,500 tonnes of crude palm oil in 2009, up 10.5 percent from 2008. IndoAgri is a unit of Indonesia's PT Indofood Sukses Makmur Tbk , the world's biggest producer of instant noodles. These involve commitments to preserve carbon-rich peatlands in Indonesia and Malaysia, where much of palm oil plantation expansion takes place, as well as support local and indigenous communities. The food giant also plans to provide technical support for palm oil suppliers that are willing to adhere to its palm eco-standards. Here are some facts about Nestle; its place in the palm oil industry and mounting pressure from green groups: * Greenpeace first targeted Nestle in a social media campaign in March of this year when it aired a commercial on YouTube showing a bored office worker chomping on a Kit Kat candy bar only to find the bloodied finger of an orangutan. * Orangutans are an endangered species of primates whose habitats in Asia often get cleared to make way for oil palm estates. Palm oil is a key ingredient used in manufacturing Kit Kat bars. * Nestle tried to shut down the commercial, citing a copyright claim on Kit Kat. Greenpeace re-posted the clip on another site and used Twitter and Facebook to highlight Nestle's move, drawing in thousands of pledges to boycott the firm. * Within hours, Nestle announced that it had stopped buying palm oil from Indonesia's Sinar Mas -- a planter that Greenpeace says has openly destroyed rainforests to expand. * Nestle also said it has pressured U.S. agribusiness giant Cargill and other blended palm oil suppliers to avoid buying palm oil related to rainforest destruction or risk getting delisted as a supplier. * Indonesian oil palm farmers on the other hand have criticised Nestle for blacklisting Sinar Mar, with many saying they were ready to boycott Nestle products sold in the Southeast Asian country, local media has reported. * Nestle annually buys 320,000 tonnes of palm oil -- roughly 0.7 percent of global production. It plans to source all of its palm oil needs from environmentally friendly sources by 2015. * Currently 18 percent of its palm oil purchases are "green" and this is expected to hit 50 percent by the end of 2011. * PT BAKRIE SUMATERA PLANTATIONS Bakrie Sumatera Plantations is the agricultural unit of the politically connected Bakrie Group, and has about 100,000 hectares of plantations in Sumatra, of which about 80 percent is planted with palm oil and the rest with natural rubber. The firm produced 211,760 tonnes of crude palm oil in 2009, up 3 percent from 2008. * WILMAR INTERNATIONAL Wilmar International , the world's largest listed palm oil firm, has a total area of more than 235,000 hectares under palm oil, of which roughly three-quarters is located in Indonesia -- in Sumatra, West and Central Kalimantan -- and the remainder in Malaysia. The firm recently expanded with the purchase of Australian conglomerate CSR Ltd's sugar business -- the world's fifth-largest sugar refiner -- for A$1.75 billion in July. NESTLE, "ECO-FRIENDLY" PALM OIL AND KIT KAT KUALA LUMPUR, May 17 (Reuters) - Swiss-based Nestle , the world's biggest food group, will work with a non-profit organisation to probe the firm's palm oil suppliers for evidence of rainforest and wildlife destruction. The move is in response to growing scrutiny by green groups over palm oil which is widely used in the food and fuel sectors. Nestle said in a statement on Monday that The Forest Trust, a charity that looks to halt illegal logging by tracing consumer products to their source, has already helped the maker of Kit Kat bars formulate guidelines for palm oil purchases. 23 Towards Sustainable Palm Oil Insight November 2010 Editorial: Thomson Reuters commodities news briefs: Richard Mably (Global Editor, Commodities & Energy) +44-207-542-6280, richard.mably@thomsonreuters.com • • • • • • • • • Veronica Brown (Editor, Commodities and Energy, EMEA) +44-20-7542-8065, Veronica.brown@thomsonreuters.com Jonathan Leff (Editor, Commodities & Energy, Americas) +1-646-223-6068, jonathan.leff@thomsonreuters.com Sambit Mohanty (Editor in Charge, Commodities & Energy, Asia), +65-6870-3084, sambit.mohanty@thomsonreuters.com Inside Oil Inside Commodities Inside Agriculture Metals Insider Coal Weekly Biofuels & Renewables Weekly Freight Monthly India Agriculture Monthly Oil Swaps Forward Curve Monthly For suggestions and comments please email commodity.briefs@thomsonreuters.com For more information: Learn more about our products and services for commodities professionals, click here Privacy statement: Send us a sales enquiry, click here To find out more about how we may collect, use and share your personal information please read our privacy statement here Contact your local Thomson Reuters office, click here © 2010 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Thomson Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is prohibited without the prior written consent of Thomson Reuters. "Thomson Reuters" and the Thomson Reuters logo are trademarks of Thomson Reuters and its affiliated companies. 24