Article | REF: F6075 V2

Palm oil Renewed challenges of sustainability

Author: Alain RIVAL

Publication date: May 10, 2020, Review date: June 1, 2021

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ABSTRACT

 An exceptional oil crop with its yield and agronomic plasticity, the oil palm has natural assets to meet the combined challenges of food security and ecological intensification. Palm oil production relies on a global agro-food sector, at the crossroad of new North / South challenges with economic, social and environmental dimensions. The present article describes a globalized sector with multiple stakeholders. It shows the challenges to be faced in terms of agronomy and environment, and sets the conditions for a sustainable palm oil production, capable of meeting a growing demand for traceability and environmental and social responsibility.

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AUTHOR

  • Alain RIVAL: Doctorate in biology from the University of Montpellier - HDR in Life Sciences from the University of Paris-Sud, Orsay, - Oil palm industry correspondent, - Regional Director for Insular Southeast Asia, CIRAD, Jakarta, Indonesia

 INTRODUCTION

The production and processing of palm oil is organized around a complex, global agro-industrial chain, whose stakeholders have multiple, often antagonistic interests.

The public controversy surrounding palm oil, as with many other subjects (parabens, GMOs or shale gas), has been fuelled and amplified by oversimplifications, caricature attacks and devastating shortcuts, which have gradually distanced the debate from the real scientific issues, in the fields of agronomy, nutrition, economics or social sciences.

As a result, consumers, elected representatives and scientists find themselves forced to choose sides: pro- or anti-palm oil, without any possible nuance, and very few of them are prepared to change their opinion.

Conservation NGOs insist on the negative impact of oil palm expansion on primary tropical forests, the ultimate reservoirs of biodiversity. The relationship between deforestation and palm is complex and often indirect. The problems caused by deforestation in the humid tropics do not stem from the palm as a plant, but from the development method chosen for its exploitation.

When properly planned by local or regional governments, the establishment of oil palm plantations usually results in strong economic development in the regions concerned and a significant reduction in rural poverty. If poorly managed, the expansion of plantations leads to the disappearance of forests with high conservation value, with negative impacts on wildlife, local populations and indigenous communities.

The establishment of plantation projects offers governments and all stakeholders a unique opportunity to develop a shared strategy capable of guiding the rapid expansion and sustainable development of the sector. This consultation must be based on an equitable partnership and be supported by mandatory and verifiable national or international certification standards. The Roundtable for Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO – Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil) is a business-to-business initiative. When it was set up in 2004, it was made up of a dozen members, private sector players (including Unilever) and NGOs (including WWF), with the aim of promoting and certifying sustainable palm oil production practices. Since its creation, international RSPO certification has been based on principles and criteria that are constantly being improved. However, the initiative is considered insufficiently coercive by some NGOs, who also criticize its slow implementation, despite the considerable progress made in over fifteen years. France also signed the "Amsterdam Declaration" on December 7, 2015. This declaration, entitled "Towards Eliminating Deforestation from Agricultural Commodity Chains with European Countries", supports...

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