Koon
Yew Yin
A
few weeks ago the sky was covered with smoke from the burning of forests in
Sumatra to clear land for agriculture. Many in Malaysia and Singapore were
affected by the haze. Some observers in the west used it as an occasion to
bad-mouth the oil palm oil further. In this article, I will try to share some
facts of life in the oil palm industry so that Malaysians will not join the
western world in their smear campaign.
Firstly,
we must remember that the west had cut down their forests and trees centuries
ago to develop their countries. Malaysia and Indonesia are both new comers in
the development scene and have been felling our forests for only a few decades
now. Of our tropical agricultural crops, oil palm is the most recent cash crop
commodity.
Although
there has been a rapid rate of exploitation, it still occupies a small
proportion of our total land area. The oil palm industry in Malaysia accounts
for 15.5 per cent of total land area and only 4.5 per cent of total land area
of Indonesia. A large proportion of the oil palm plantations are also not newly
felled forest but are old rubber plantations that have been converted to this
more lucrative crop.
Many
in the public know of my views which are critical of many developments in the
country. However, praise needs to be given when it is deserved; and our home
grown oil palm industry is one which deserves all our support. This support is
important in view of the sustained criticism made against the oil palm industry
by lobby groups that have their origin in the west.
Why
We Should Support Our Oil Palm Industry
There
are many good reasons to support our oil palm industry in Malaysia and
Indonesia. These are some of the most important.
1.
Firstly it is not only Felda settlers that are dependent on the crop for a
livelihood. Malaysia’s annual US$25 billion (RM79.75 billion) palm oil exports
support some two million jobs and livelihoods along the sprawling value chain.
This means that one in every five working Malaysian is dependent for his or her
livelihood on the crop.
2.
Plantations have borne the brunt of the bad publicity. However, the small
farmers are also affected. More than 40 per cent of oil palm planters in
Indonesia are smallholders whilst in Malaysia they contribute to 38 per cent of
the country’s palm oil output.
3.
Environmental activist groups such as World Wildlife Fund, Friends of the Earth
and Greenpeace have launched many campaigns alleging that the expansion of oil
palm plantations have destroyed forests, threatened endangered wildlife and
robbed indigenous peoples of their land. Many of their arguments are not based
on fact but are sensationalized from a small and atypical number of cases.
4.
The anti-oil palm lobby in the west includes pro-soya bean and rape-seed groups
who see oil palm as a major competitor and have recruited food lobbyists to
play on fears of the health hazards of palm oil consumption. . Together with
environmental activists, these well-funded groups have created trade barriers
to the global oil palm trade under the pretext of environmental activism.
5.
In a fair contest amongst competing vegetable oils, palm oil will win hands
down. The oil palm tree is the world’s most efficient oil crop because one can
harvest five tonnes of oil per hectare. This is 10 times more productive than
soya bean planted in the West, including United States and five times more
productive than rapeseed, Europe’s main oil crop.
6.
It is an undeniable fact that palm oil is the cheapest and most popular form of
cooking oil for consumers, including many poor families in the west. Should
trade barriers to benefit rapeseed farmers who are already heavily subsidised
by the European Union (EU) government be successfully implemented, this will
hurt consumers all over the world.
7.
Also should alternatives to oil palm be grown, more land would be needed to
produce an equivalent volume of oil to replace palm oil, resulting in more
deforestation and problems for Mother Earth.
8.
Oil palm smallholdings and plantations meet the United Nation’s Framework
Convention on Climate Change which defines a forest as an area of 0.5 to one
hectare having more than 30 per cent canopy cover and having a potential height
of two to five metres. To accuse the industry in Malaysia and Indonesia of
contributing to global warming is sheer nonsense. In fact oil palm trees just
as with other forest species, produce oxygen for us to breathe and act to
counter coal and oil emissions which are the major cause of global warming.
9.
Finally, the western environmental activists’ campaign against oil palm
plantation expansion, in the name of “saving rainforests”, is a violation of
international norms and Malaysia’s and Indonesia’s sovereignty.
Appeal
to Malaysians
In a keynote address to over a thousand delegates at a conference organised by the Incorporated Society of Planters (ISP) in Sibu, Sarawak, recently, Datuk Amar Abdul Hamed Sepawi, Chairman of Sarawak Plantation Berhad warned, “We’re at a crossroads. It’s time for oil palm planters to adapt to the fast-changing world of ruthless vegetable oil politics if we want to stay relevant in this market”.
In a keynote address to over a thousand delegates at a conference organised by the Incorporated Society of Planters (ISP) in Sibu, Sarawak, recently, Datuk Amar Abdul Hamed Sepawi, Chairman of Sarawak Plantation Berhad warned, “We’re at a crossroads. It’s time for oil palm planters to adapt to the fast-changing world of ruthless vegetable oil politics if we want to stay relevant in this market”.
Conclusion:
I
trust all Malaysians will circulate this article to all their contacts to fight
against the smear campaign against our palm oil industry and eventually I hope
consumers, all over the world, will not buy soyabean or rapeseed oil which is
more expensive and not really superior to palm oil.
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