SUSTAINABLE SHIPMENT OPENS NEW PALM OIL OPTIONS


Environmental Panorama
International
November of 2008


12 Nov 2008 - Rotterdam, NL: The arrival of the first certified sustainable palm oil shipment in Europe opens up possibilities for palm oil users to move away from subsidising forest destruction and social disruption from expanding palm oil plantations.

The shipment, from south-east Asia, is of palm oil certified as compliant with the Roundtable for Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) Principles and Criteria, a set of standards that ensure that palm oil is produced in a socially and environmentally responsible way.

As a founding member of the RSPO, WWF has worked since 2002 with a wide range of stakeholders to ensure that the RSPO standards contain robust social and environmental criteria, including a prohibition on the conversion of valuable forests.

“The arrival of RSPO certified palm oil in Europe is an important milestone,” said Rodney Taylor, Director of WWF International’s Forest Programme. “With the RSPO’s certification system up and running, companies now have the means to buy responsibly.”

Over 28 million tonnes of palm oil are produced worldwide and it is used in a wide variety of foods including margarine, cooking oil, crisps, cakes, biscuits and pastry. It is also found in cosmetics, soaps, shampoos and detergents.

However oil palm plantations have often imposed environmental and social costs due to loss of habitat important to threatened and endangered species and indiscriminate forest clearing which contributes to climate change.

The RSPO brings together oil palm growers, oil processors, food companies, retailers, NGOs and investors to help ensure that no rainforest areas are sacrificed for new palm oil plantations, that all plantations minimize their environmental impacts and that basic rights of local peoples and plantation workers are fully respected.

Several European companies, including Unilever, Sainsbury’s and Albert Heijn, have already made strong public commitments to buy certified sustainable palm oil.

Many more companies need to do the same. WWF calls on retailers and manufacturers to get behind the RSPO by making concrete, timebound plans to shift their palm oil purchases to 100 per cent certified.

While welcoming the shipment, WWF also believes that the RSPO needs to tighten and strengthen its systems, and will be encouraging such action at the November annual meeting of the body.

RSPO membership is open to producers who are not certified. While its Code of Conduct encourages member producers to pursue certification, the RSPO lacks any real checks on the practices of these uncertified members.

Stakeholders do not always appreciate the distinction between a company’s membership of the RSPO and the certification of individual plantations.

This places the RSPO’s credibility at risk, especially given the recent Greenpeace reports alleging that several RSPO members are engaged in practices prohibited by the RSPO criteria for socially and environmentally responsible production of palm oil.

“The RSPO should fully investigate allegations of misconduct against its members,” said Taylor. “The RSPO can maintain its credibility by refusing to provide any form of cover for a company that violates the RSPO sustainability criteria.”

+ More

EU needs carbon-free energy policy by mid-century, says WWF

13 Nov 2008 - Brussels, Belgium - The European Commission released today an ‘Energy security and solidarity action plan’ which addresses some of the gaps in the present EU climate and energy policy, such as the need to strengthen energy efficiency and ease grid access for renewable energies.

Yet, WWF noted major contradictions among suggested policies, lack of ambition and a Christmas tree of actions with little relevance for the environmental and economic objectives outlined in the proposals. For one, no mandatory target for energy efficiency has been included in the package.

Energy efficiency is the most immediate and cost-effective solution to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, ensure resilience to economic crisis and improve security of energy supply in Europe. Despite this, it remains the ‘Cinderella’ in the European Union energy policy.

“Proposed measures fail in ambition as they do not include a mandatory energy saving target of 20 per cent by 2020 for the European Union - a key move to reduce consumers energy bill, boost innovation, facilitate the achievement of the EU’s greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets and support a strong EU performance at international climate negotiations,” says Mariangiola Fabbri, Energy Policy Officer at WWF.

As Europe’s buildings account for 40 per cent of EU final energy use, WWF sees the improvement of the Energy Performance of Buildings Directive as a priority and an opportunity not to be missed to strengthen EU’s climate and energy goals.

“EU countries should have been obliged to have stricter standards for both existing and new buildings by 2015. We need to shift buildings from being energy wasters to climate savers,” adds Mariangiola Fabbri.

On a positive note, WWF is pleased to see that the EU intends to embark on the ‘Renewable energy supergrid’, an innovative electricity highway to connect solar power from Southern Europe and North Africa, offshore wind power produced in the Atlantic and other renewable energy sources from the mainland. WWF, however, is concerned that continuous focus on fossil fuels might undermine this project.

“The renewable energy supergrid must become a priority as it has the potential to provide renewable electricity to all European citizens and make the European energy sector carbon-free in the decades to come”, said Dr Stephan Singer, WWF’s Global Energy Policy Director.

“It is disappointing, though, to see new investments for infrastructures that keep Europe dependent on oil, gas and other conventional fuels which counteract the benefit of renewable energy.”

WWF urges the European Parliament and the Council of Ministers to strengthen the laws and come to an agreement before the EU elections, in June 2009.
Stephan Singer, Global Energy Policy Director at WWF
Mariangiola Fabbri, Energy Policy Officer at WWF

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
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