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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, May 2, 2017
Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand join forces against EU on palm oil
Workers collect oil palm fruits at Felda Sungai Tengi Selatan plantation in Sungai Tengi, 100 km (62 miles) north of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Source: Reuters/Bazuki Muhammad
Workers collect oil palm fruits at Felda Sungai Tengi Selatan plantation in Sungai Tengi, 100 km (62 miles) north of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Source: Reuters/Bazuki Muhammad
(L
to R) Indonesia’s President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo, Malaysian Prime
Minister Najib Razak and Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha link arms
as they pose for photographers during the 10th Indonesia – Malaysia –
Thailand Growth Triangle (IMT-GT) Summit as part of the 30th Association
of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) summit in metropolitan Manila,
Philippines April 29, 2017. Source: Reuters/Aaron Favila
ASEAN neighbours and the world’s top palm oil producers Indonesia,
Malaysia and Thailand have vowed to fight a European Union resolution
they fear would deal a major blow to one of their biggest exports.
Speaking during the Indonesia Malaysia Thailand – Growth Triangle (IMT-GT) which is running parallel to the 30th Asean
Summit in the Philippines this week, Indonesia’s foreign affairs
minister Retno Marsudi claimed there was an international smear campaign
against oil palm.
“The latest example is the discriminative European parliament resolution on palm oil,” she said.
In April, the EU passed a resolution to phase out the use of
unsustainably produced vegetable oils, including palm oil, in the
production of biodiesel by 2020.
Retno also urged Thailand to join the Council of Palm Oil Producing Countries that Indonesia formed with Malaysia, reported Tempo.
Reflecting the importance of palm oil to their respective economies, the
IMT-GT Summit saw the attendance of Indonesian President Joko “Jokowi”
Widodo, Malaysian Prime Minster Najib Razak, and Thai PM Prayuth
Chan-o-cha.
Indonesia and Malaysia produce 80
percent of the world’s palm oil between them, and Thailand is the third
largest producing country. The highly productive crop, which is found
in supermarket items from snacks to cosmetics, has driven economic
growth.
The palm oil industry has long been criticised by environmentalists,
however, for its contribution to rapid deforestation in Indonesia,
Malaysia and Thailand during recent decades.
#WorldTapirDay. #tapir existed for millions of years but due to habitat loss, and palm oil plantations, logging,settlements now under threat
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3:23 AM - 27 Apr 2017
“If this resolution were to be enforced, it will have a devastating
effect on our national interest, particularly the [livelihoods of]
600,000 smallholders in Malaysia and 2.4 million in Indonesia,” Najib told reporters on Sunday.
Haze largely caused by illegal slash-and-burn agricultural policies in
Indonesia has affected the Southeast Asian region annually for decades
and been the cause of diplomatic tensions within the region.
Uncontrolled burning from fires in Riau, South Sumatra, and Kalimantan
causes smoke to spread hundreds of kilometers across the region to
Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, and the Philippines, resulting in major
deterioration in air quality levels, health problems, and economic
losses.
Speaking at the Economist Indonesia Summit in Jakarta in April, Eric
Wakker the co-founder of NGO Aid Environment Eric Wakker told a panel on
haze and oil palm that “under the current Jokowi administration, things
have improved tremendously.”
He said that the past three years had been positive with palm oil
companies adopting “a very serious commitment to clean up the supply
chain”, but expressed disappointment that it had taken decades to
achieve progress while forests continued to be destroyed.
“We will do whatever we can to convince the European parliament and
European countries not to implement it. We don’t want to think of the
middle ground just yet, we will negotiate in full force,” Indonesian
coordinating minister for economic affairs Darmin Nasution told reporters in April.
Indonesia and Malaysia will send a joint mission to meet with EU officials this month.