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Iceland's Palm Oil Move 'Misleading For Consumers', Says CPOPC

By Publications Checkout
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Iceland's Palm Oil Move 'Misleading For Consumers', Says CPOPC

The Council of Palm Oil-Producing Countries (CPOPC) – a board led by Indonesia and Malaysia – said that British supermarket chain Iceland's decision to remove palm oil from its own-brand food products is "misleading" to consumers.

Iceland said last week that, due to concerns over rainforest destruction, it would remove palm oil from all of its own-brand products by the end of 2018, reducing demand for the vegetable oil by more than 500 tonnes per year.

'[The claims being made against palm oil are] misleading the consumers on the environmental benefits of other vegetable oil,' CPOPC executive director Mahendra Siregar wrote in a letter addressed to Richard Walker, managing director of Iceland.

Siregar confirmed the content of the letter, dated 13 April, late on Sunday.

Demand Continues To Grow

The CPOPC said that demand for vegetable oil continues to grow, and that replacing palm oil with other vegetable oils, such as from rapeseed, soybeans and sunflower seeds, would lead to 10-20 times greater land use to produce the same amount of oil.

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Iceland, which specialises in frozen food and operates around 900 stores, said that it has already removed palm oil from half of its own-brand products.

A demand boom for widely used palm oil has led to palm plantations spread across 18 million hectares in Indonesia and Malaysia, according to data from Indonesian government and the Malaysia Palm Oil Board. Indonesia and Malaysia are the world's largest and second-largest producers of palm oil.

Critics say that the expansion has resulted in an increase in the greenhouse gases that warm the planet.

Certified Sustainable Palm Oil

Palm plantations are also often blamed for forest fires that regularly take place on Sumatra and Kalimantan in Indonesia, blanketing large areas of Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore in a choking haze that can hang in the air for weeks.

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Last year, the European Parliament voted to phase out the use of unsustainable palm oil in biodiesel by 2020. The resolution endorsed a single Certified Sustainable Palm Oil (CSPO) plan for European-bound palm and other vegetable oils to ensure that they are produced in an environmentally sustainable way.

Europe is the second-largest market for both Indonesia and Malaysia. India is the largest.

Indonesia has been promoting the oil in new markets to mitigate the risk of dropping European demand, while promoting the wider use of biodiesel locally, to soak up supply.

News by Reuters, edited by ESM. Click subscribe to sign up to ESM: European Supermarket Magazine. 

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