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A worker collects palm oil fruit at a factory in Sepang, outside Kuala Lumpur. Photo: Reuters

Malaysia says ties with Europe will take a hit from the trading bloc’s moves to cut back on rainforest-destroying palm oil

  • European lawmakers are introducing new restrictions as they look towards a complete ban on the edible oil by 2030
  • Malaysia is the second biggest producer of palm oil in the world, after neighbouring Indonesia
Malaysia

A European Union campaign to restrict the use of palm oil in biofuels could put the trading bloc’s relations with Malaysia in jeopardy, an official from the Southeast Asian nation said on Tuesday.

Last year, European lawmakers backed measures to limit the use of palm oil in biofuels, ahead of an eventual ban in 2030. More recently, France laid out plans to curb imports of palm oil and exclude it from biodiesel feedstock, while Norway approved plans to ban biofuels containing palm oil from 2020.

Palm oil plantations are often blamed for mass deforestation and habitat loss. Photo: Ernest Zacharevic

The palm oil industry is often blamed by environmental groups for deforestation and the displacement of wildlife and indigenous communities. Malaysia, as the world’s second biggest producer of the substance, has criticised the move by European countries.

The country’s minister for primary industries, Teresa Kok, said she expects more European countries to pass similar resolutions.

“This is going to affect bilateral relations between Malaysia and all these EU countries,” Kok told reporters on the sidelines of a palm oil industry conference.

Malaysians protest against the European Union’s campaign to ban palm-oil biofuels last year. Photo: EPA

The issue has been discussed with the cabinet and Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad will write to the president of France and the prime minister of Norway, she said.

Last year, top palm oil producers Indonesia and Malaysia criticised the European Union for backing a ban on the use of palm oil in biofuels, with a Malaysian minister calling the move a protectionist trade barrier and a form of “crop apartheid”.

Palm fruits, from which the oil is extracted. Photo: Reuters

Kok said she hopes to see palm oil prices rise to more than 2,700 ringgit ($656) this year, from the 2,186 ringgit they were trading at on Tuesday.

Prices of the vegetable oil, used in everything from biscuits and soap to lipstick, have taken a hit from high inventories.

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