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Under gov’t pressure, palm oil giants disband green pledge

Scientists hope that orangutans will use the riparian corridors to move between forest patches surrounded by oil palm plantations. Photo by Rhett A. Butler

  • The members of the Indonesia Palm Oil Pledge, a pact between six palm oil refiners to purge their supply chains of environmental destruction and human rights abuses, announced on Friday they were disbanding the agreement.
  • The companies — Wilmar International, Cargill, Golden Agri-Resources, Asian Agri, Musim Mas and Astra Agro Lestari — feared being investigated by Indonesia’s anti-monopoly agency, according to the leaked transcript of a recent meeting between the firms.
  • NGOs condemned the decision as a setback for the movement to clean up the palm oil industry, whose rapid expansion is eating away at Indonesia’s rainforests and dispossessing indigenous peoples.

A landmark environmental pledge by the world’s largest palm oil producing companies folded on Friday following a threat by Indonesia’s anti-monopoly agency to investigate the group for cartel-like practices.

The six-member Indonesia Palm Oil Pledge (IPOP) announced on Friday that it would disband after weeks of rumors and contradictory statements from bureaucrats and executives on the organization’s future.

Gamal Nasir, plantations director at the Indonesian agriculture ministry, was the first to announce that IPOP would dissolve following a meeting with top palm oil executives earlier this week, but Nurdiana Darus, executive director of IPOP’s management team, insisted at the time that no decision had been made.

“This morning they came [to our office] and reported that they were willing to resign,” Nasir, who has been one of IPOP’s most outspoken critics, said on Wednesday. “We are very pleased and supportive [of their decision].”

Two days later, IPOP announced the pledge would dissolve. It marks the end of a historic period of cooperation between six palm oil giants on the shared goal of cleaning up an industry whose breakneck expansion has fueled deforestation, forest fires and social conflict even as it drives economic growth in Indonesia, the world’s top producer of the edible oil. Environmental groups have called the decision a major setback.

“IPOP’s dissolution is a disappointing step backward in the urgent fight to achieve truly responsible palm oil and is a major lost opportunity for Indonesia’s palm oil industry to maintain its stake in the global market,” said Gemma Tillack, agribusiness campaign director for the Rainforest Action Network.

Fire set for peatland clearing in Riau Province, Indonesia in July 2015. Photo by Rhett A. Butler
A peatland planted with oil palm trees in Indonesia’s Sumatra burns during the 2015 fire and haze crisis. The burning happens every dry season because the country’s vast peat swamp zones have been widely drained and dried for oil palm and pulpwood cultivation, while planters often lose control of fires they set to clear the land. Last year’s disaster sent toxic haze billowing across the region, pumped a massive amount of carbon into the atmosphere, sickened half a million people and, according to the World Bank, cost Indonesia $16 billion. Photo by Rhett A. Butler/Mongabay

The end of the pledge does not necessarily mean its corporate signatories — Wilmar International, Cargill, Golden Agri-Resources, Asian Agri, Musim Mas and Astra Agro Lestari — will roll back on their individual commitments to eliminate deforestation, peatlands conversion and human rights abuses from their vast supply networks. Each of the companies said on Friday that it would uphold its own policy.

But the pledge, signed at a climate summit in 2014, also counted the Indonesian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (Kadin) as a member and included a commitment to lobby Indonesia to raise the standards of the law, which protect only some types of forest and peatland, in line with those of the pledge.

An oil palm plantation in Indonesia's Riau province. Photo by Rhett A. Butler/Mongabay
An oil palm plantation in Indonesia’s Riau province. Photo by Rhett A. Butler/Mongabay

Some in the administration of President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo and in parliament had slammed IPOP for infringing on Indonesian sovereignty and hurting smaller operators who could not keep up with Western standards for sustainable palm oil production. Other officials had been more supportive of its goals.

The government has its own palm oil certification scheme, ISPO, and at a meeting with economic ministers earlier this week IPOP representatives agreed to focus their efforts to transform the sector on the state-backed program rather than through a cooperation of their own.

“IPOP signatories are committed to support efforts to strengthen and improve ISPO as the standard that is to be accepted and recognized by the international market,” said Shinta Widjaja Kamdani, Kadin’s vice chairman of international relations. “We hope to have better coordination between the government and the private sector in transforming our palm oil sector to become a sustainable sector and maintain our oil palm as one of our nation’s strategic commodities.”

Executive decision

IPOP members have publicly heaped praise on the government for recent measures to strengthen environmental protections. In the wake of last year’s devastating forest and peatland fires, Jokowi announced a moratorium on new peatland development and on the issuance of new palm oil plantation permits, and created an agency to restore damaged peatlands across the archipelago.

But behind closed doors IPOP was concerned about increasing pressure from Jakarta — including an ongoing investigation by the anti-monopoly agency (KPPU) that threatened to pull the companies into a Supreme Court hearing and open them up to wider scrutiny by members of the House of Representatives.

Mongabay obtained a transcript of a May 27 meeting in Singapore between IPOP members and an attorney consulting with the KPPU on the case. The notes showed an organization struggling to chart a course through confusing and often contradictory waters.

IPOP’s members and management team have declined to answer direct questions about the transcripts, or even acknowledge them, during several requests for confirmation.

A large male orangutan is rescued and relocated after his home forest was destroyed for oil palm expansion in Indonesia's Tripa peat swamp. Photo by Paul Hilton
A large male orangutan is rescued and relocated after his home forest was destroyed for oil palm expansion in Indonesia’s Tripa peat swamp. Photo by Paul Hilton

University of North Sumatra professor and antitrust law expert Ningrum Natasya Sirait presided over much of the meeting, offering the executives a “neutral” analysis of their quandary. According to the transcript, Sirait told them they were “absolutely guilty” because any meeting between competitors that didn’t take place under the auspices of a government-sponsored association could be construed as a violation of Indonesia’s “gray” antitrust laws.

This had put them on the radar of the KPPU, an organization eager to successfully prosecute a cartel after failing to do so in cases involving the cement, pharmaceutical and petroleum industries, according to Sirait. On April 14, the agency declared that “the IPOP agreement has the potential to become the means of a cartel that will give rise to monopolistic practices and/or unhealthy business competition. Therefore, the KPPU states that the IPOP agreement cannot be implemented.”

The agency’s pledge to investigate IPOP apparently rattled its corporate signatories, who convened on May 27 to chart a course of action. By the end of the meeting, five of the six companies had voted in favor of dissolution, with only Astra Agro Lestari abstaining because the representative present could not reach their superiors.

“The KPPU issue is becoming too strong,” Petra Meekers, director of sustainability at Musim Mas, is quoted as saying in the transcript. “We don’t want to go into court [over] this.”

Jeremy Goon, Wilmar’s sustainability chief, concurred. “This KPPU case is something that we do not want to get [into] court,” he said.

A worker on a palm oil plantation in Indonesia's Sumatra. Photo by Rhett A. Butler/Mongabay
A worker on a palm oil plantation in Indonesia’s Sumatra. Photo by Rhett A. Butler/Mongabay

Despite their tentative agreement to disband, the executives decided to postpone a final decision, and talked about making the case to the government that dissolving IPOP could hinder their access to Western markets and further sully the industry’s reputation.

And then on Wednesday this week, the agriculture ministry’s Nasir announced that IPOP had come to an end.

The anti-IPOP campaign

The question of whether IPOP is a cartel is an open one which the pledge’s members have fretted about for some time.

Some government officials have accused IPOP of restricting competition by refusing to buy from suppliers linked to deforestation and peatlands conversion. The palm oil giants have sometimes suspended purchases from operators shown to have violated their policies.

The main anti-IPOP argument goes that downstream zero-deforestation pledges harm smallholders who cannot meet meet such high standards. “If this agreement is implemented, it’s farmers who will be affected…Don’t torment farmers,” Nasir said in February.

Smallholders manage 40% of Indonesia’s palm oil plantations, while the IPOP members control most of the refining capacity. Palm oil is Indonesia’s third-biggest export after petroleum and coal.

Agribusinesses with zero-deforestation commitments are loathe to publicly criticize the government, but some have privately questioned the “smallholder” justification for challenging their initiative, suggesting the opposition is more about protecting bigger companies who want to keep expanding.

“It’s never been about smallholders,” one such palm oil executive told Mongabay recently. “‘Smallholders’ is only being used…So it’s the companies. And those companies, those rogue companies, have access to the government, have access to all kinds of things.”

A palm oil mill in Indonesia. Photo by Rhett A. Butler/Mongabay
A palm oil mill in Indonesia. Photo by Rhett A. Butler/Mongabay

There is also the sentiment that IPOP forced the will of foreign nations on domestic growers by adhering to environmental standards that went well beyond those dictated by Indonesian law. In the House of Representatives, and in the pages of the international press, IPOP was painted as an affront to Indonesia’s national sovereignty and a sign of the arrogance of consumers in “developed countries.”

It was statements like these that have left environmental groups like Greenpeace to question whether government officials were spending too much time rattling nationalistic sabers and not enough time focusing on President Jokowi’s lauded environmental protection measures.

“Instead of applauding and promoting this sensible private sector initiative, government officials have bullied and threatened IPOP members,” said Annisa Rahmawati, forest campaigner with Greenpeace Indonesia. “The ministry of agriculture needs to get its priorities right. Last year’s forest fires crippled Indonesia’s economy and poisoned people across the region.

“Instead of bad-mouthing IPOP and its members, government officials should urgently work towards delivering President Jokowi’s plans to stop forest fires by halting the palm oil industry’s expansion into forests and peatlands.”

— Mongabay Indonesia reporters Sapariah Saturi and Lusia Arumingtyas contributed to this report

 

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