“Many palm growers in Southeast Asia have worked hard to comply with strict rules ensuring that their oil is produced sustainably,” said Johan Verburg, Executive Board member of the Roundtable on behalf of Oxfam International. “Now, product manufacturers and retailers in the rest of the world will have the opportunity to keep their end of the bargain and demonstrate that the private sector and NGOs can come together to bring meaningful change.”
Palm oil is the world’s primary vegetable oil. In Europe, palm oil is now used as an ingredient in about half of all packaged consumer products, including margarine, ice cream, chocolate, detergents, soap and cookies. In the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil, oil palm growers, traders, brand manufacturers, retailers, banks, and leading NGOs such as WWF and Oxfam International work together to create a growing supply of sustainable palm oil.
RSPO rules and audits on the ground guarantee that social and environmental standards were met during the production of certified sustainable palm oil. For example, producers need to protect the habitats of endangered species and no new primary forests can be cut for oil palm plantations. The rights of local communities, smallholders and workers have to be respected as well.
The Roundtable’s supply chain systems add incentives for palm oil producers and buyers—such as consumer goods manufacturers and retail companies—to grow and use ever more sustainable palm oil.
The uptake of sustainable palm oil now flowing into the market will be monitored in various ways. The RSPO itself will soon ask all its members to publish their production or buying plans and to set firm deadlines for making 100% of their palm oil purchases sustainable, as stipulated by an Oxfam-inspired decision by RSPO’s General Assembly late last year.
Separately, WWF, one of the Roundtable’s founding members, has announced the creation of ‘The Palm Oil Buyer’s Scorecard’ in which WWF will publicly grade major global retailers, product manufacturers and traders based on the extent of their actual and projected sustainable palm oil purchases, as well as their policies and communications on sustainable palm oil.
“From here on, the RSPO will need short-term and long-term commitments from market parties to buy significant volumes of sustainable palm oil,” Oxfam International’s Johan Verburg said. “These will ensure continuing improvements by palm oil producers, which will benefit local communities, small farmers, labor as well as the environment."
About the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO)
The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil, a multi-stakeholder association, was created in 2003 by seven organizations aiming to make the production of palm oil sustainable. The Roundtable includes growers, processors, traders, retailers, investors, and leading NGOs such as WWF and Oxfam International. The RSPO currently has more than 370 members, and membership is growing.
RSPO Press Center: www.rspo.eu/press
The RSPO Press Center contains links to all sorts of information, such as up-to-date fact sheets and slide presentations with useful statistics, answers to frequently asked questions, and copyright-free still and video images. For other types of assistance, please contact the RSPO EU Communications helpdesk at
[email protected], tel +32-2-231-5019.
Sustainable palm oil production passes major milestone.pdf