Palm oil

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Oil Palm (Source: Wikipedia)
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Oil Palm (Source: Wikipedia)

Palm oil is a form of edible vegetable oil obtained from the fruit of the oil palm tree. The palm fruit is the source of both palm oil (extracted from palm fruit) and palm kernel oil (extracted from the fruit seeds). In addition to being used as cooking oil and as a component of many processed foods, palm oil is used to make biodiesel. Palm oil is one of the few vegetable oils relatively high in saturated fats (such as coconut oil).

Contents

Events

2009

2008

2007

History

Palm oil was long known of in West African states, and amongst West African peoples, and saw widespread use as a cooking oil. However, palm oil remained rare outside West Africa. During the early nineteenth century, palm oil became a highly sought-after commodity by British traders, the oil being used as industrial lubricant for the machines of Britain's ongoing Industrial Revolution, as well as forming the basis for soaps such as Palmolive. By c. 1870, palm oil constituted the primary export of West Africa. By the 1880's, cocoa became more highly sought-after, leading to the decline of the palm oil trade. (Source: Wikipedia) Palm oil was first introduced to Malaysia in 1870 as an ornamental plant and is now a leading agricultural crop. (source: MPOB)

Sustainability

Greenhouse gases (CO2)

  • Burning of forests to clear ground can cause significant air pollution and releases large quantities of CO2. (Reference needed)
Orangutan habitat has been cleared to create oil palm plantations in Indonesia and Malaysia.
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Orangutan habitat has been cleared to create oil palm plantations in Indonesia and Malaysia.

Biodiversity

Pollution

  • Large scale burning of forest to clear land for palm oil in Indonesia is causing pollution levels to climb in Southeast Asia, resulting in mounting haze-related health problems, traffic accidents, and associated economic costs. (Source:mongabay)

Land degradation

Social sustainability

  • In Indonesia, land for plantations is often allegedly sold to companies without consultation or compensation for the indigineous people who are living there and whose livelihood comes from the forest1.

Species conservation

  • The rapid conversion of Indonesian rain forest into oil palm plantations is a direct threat to the survival of orangutans in the wild. Learn more here.

Technology/Science

Properties

  • Oil palm is regarded as the most cost-effective vegetable oil crop, with average yields of 3.5-5.0 t of palm oil per hectare per year, making it a very efficient feedstock for conversion into biofuel. (Source: MPOB)
  • Palm oil is very high in saturated fats.

Technology

Economics/Policy

  • Some researchers have suggested that anything above $55 a barrel makes palm oil-based biodiesel a commercially viable option. (Reference needed)
  • Most active biodiesel plants are heavily subsidized by the government and may not be sustainable in a truly competitive market. (Reference needed)
  • In 2007, some members of the European Parliament have called for a ban on palm oil biodiesel due to increasing sustainability concerns (see articles below).

News

  • Biofuels standards challenged by new report on Malaysian Palm Oil , 8 October 2008 by Friends of the Earth UK: "Malaysian palm oil is finding its way into British petrol tanks despite concerns about its carbon balance and the rainforest being destroyed to produce it - according to a new report by Friends of the Earth international."
    • "The UK Renewable Fuels Agency (RFA) has reported that Malaysian palm oil being used for fuel in the UK meets a 'qualifying environmental standard', but Friends of the Earth's research reveals it is far from green."
    • The FOE report finds that Sarawak state in Malaysia "plans to more than double its 2007 levels of oil palm acreage by 2010....at the expense of tropical forests" and that "companies regularly practice open burning on carbon rich peat soils releasing millions of tonnes of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere".[3]
    • See the report Malaysian Palm Oil: Green Gold or Green Wash?
  • First GreenPalm Certificates Traded, 4 September 2008. In its newsletter, Greenpalm announced that "just hours after the first GreenPalm certificates were offered for sale on our website (...), a bid of $50 per certificate, was received and accepted. Further bids have subsequently been made.
    The purchaser of the first GreenPalm certificates will now be able to prove that their business, or brand, supports the production of sustainable palm oil.
    The producer of that palm oil, the first in our scheme to be successfully audited against the new and rigorous Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) audit, has earned a worthwhile premium for producing palm oil sustainably."
  • Biofuels and banquets put pressure on stocks of palm oil, 9 January 2008 by the Times Online, reported that "The Malaysian Government has been forced to release emergency stocks of palm oil to break a wave of panic-buying after cooking oil prices soared. The crisis has prompted palm oil rationing in a country that is one of the world’s largest producers."
  • Malaysia May Revoke Biofuel Permits as Palm Oil Rises, 11 December 2007, by Bloomberg: "Malaysia, the second-biggest palm oil producer, may revoke some licenses to produce biofuel from the commodity...as the surging price of the raw material makes the fuel too expensive to make, a minister said." The minister also noted that one of Malaysia's four biodiesel manufacturing plants may close in the face of increased prices for the feedstock, which has risen some 55 percent in the past year.[6]
  • Dutch to deny palm subsidies until green levels met, 10 December 2007: "The Netherlands warned...it will not renew subsidies for palm-based biofuel until global producers meet its environmental requirements." The Netherlands reportedly will "mandate stringent criteria to help limit environmental damage" under its green energy subsidy system in 2008. Environment Minister Jacqueline Cramer was quoted as saying that "Until the problems are solved, there will be no subsidy for palm oil....It makes no sense to use palm oil for bio-energy purposes while the carbon dioxide produced is more than what we are actually trying to save, particularly when you cut down peatforests."
  • A who's who of Indonesian biofuel, 22 May 2007, from Asia Times Online. Many of the companies that are now investing heavily in Indonesia's biodiesel industry are the sames ones that "incurred and defaulted on huge foreign debts in the wake of the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis. Few fully repaid their debts and today they still dominate the country's logging, wood-processing and pulp industries. Several also have highly suspect environmental records."

Publications

See books, reports, scientific papers, position papers and websites for additional useful resources.

Regions/Countries

Look here for more detailed information on a specific country's or region's policies, organizations and industry.

Organizations

Other oil palm products

Palm oil leavings

References

  1. Promised Land - Palm Oil and Land Acquisition in Indonesia: Implications for Local Communities and Indigenous Peoples by Marcus Colchester, Norman Jiwan, Andiko, Martua Sirait, Asep Yunan Firdaus, A. Surambo, Herbert Pane; Forest Peoples Programme, Perkumpulan Sawit Watch, HuMA and the World Agroforestry Centre, 2006. "An intensive, multi-disciplinary study of the legal and institutional processes of land acquisition for oil palm plantings in Indonesia with a focus on the rights of local communities and indigenous peoples."


Bioenergy feedstocks edit

Biodiesel feedstocks:
Currently in use: Animal fat | Castor beans | Coconut oil | Jatropha | Jojoba | Karanj | Palm oil | Rapeseed | Soybeans | Sunflower seed | Waste Vegetable Oil (WVO)
Currently in research and development: Algae | Halophytes (Salt-tolerant plants)


Ethanol feedstocks:
First-generation: Cassava | Corn | Milo | Nypa palm | Sorghum | Sugar beets | Sugar cane | Sugar palm |Sweet potato | Waste citrus peels | Wheat | Whey
Second-generation: For cellulosic technology - Grasses: Miscanthus, Prairie grasses, Switchgrass | Trees: Hybrid poplar, Mesquite, Willow


Charcoal feedstocks: Bamboo | Wood
Waste-to-energy (MSW)

Bioenergy issues edit
Agriculture (Land use) | Climate change | Economics | Environment | Social (Poverty) | Trade

Controversies: Food versus fuel | Net energy | Carbon debt


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