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The Global Politics of The Business of "Sustainable" Palm Oil

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The Global Politics of the Business

of “Sustainable” Palm Oil



Peter Dauvergne*

Abstract
The palm oil industry is increasingly certifying its activities as “sustainable,” “respon-
sible,” and “conflict-free.” This trend does not represent a breakthrough toward better
governance, this article argues, but primarily reflects a business strategy to channel crit-
icism toward “unsustainable” palm oil, while promoting the value for protecting rain
forests of corporate social responsibility, international trade, industrial production, and
industry-guided certification. Illegalities and loopholes riddle certification in Indonesia
and Malaysia, the two main sources of certified palm oil; at the same time, palm oil
imports are rising in markets not demanding certification. Across the tropics, oil palm
plantations linked to deforestation and human rights abuses are continuing to expand
as companies navigate weak governance rules, and as sales shift across markets and
inside global supply chains. Theoretically, this analysis advances the understanding
of why and how the power of business is rising over the narratives and institutions
of global agricultural governance.

World production of palm oil and palm kernel oil has tripled since 2000, today
accounting for more than one-third of the global production of vegetable oils
and almost two-thirds of global trade in vegetable oils (US Department of
Agriculture [USDA] 2002, 5; USDA 2017, 11). Approximately half of packaged
food and personal hygiene products in a typical supermarket now contain oil
from the oil palm tree. It is in margarine, chocolate, cookies, cereal, ice cream,
and dog food. It is in toothpaste, detergent, lipstick, and shampoo. It is in bio-
diesel. And it is widely used for deep-frying food. On ingredient lists, it appears
under scores of different names besides “palm oil” and “palm kernel oil,”
including “palmitate,” “palmitic acid,” “glyceryl stearate,” “sodium kernelate,”
and “hydrogenated palm glycerides.”
Palm oil has many appealing qualities. It has a long shelf life; it holds up
well in hot climates and under intense heat; it is virtually odorless and highly
versatile; and it is less expensive than comparable oils. Yet, over the past four
decades, the growing and processing of oil palm have been leading causes of

* The author is grateful to the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada for
providing research funding for this article (grant 435-2014-0115).

Global Environmental Politics 18:2, May 2018, doi:10.1162/glep_a_00455


© by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology

34
Peter Dauvergne • 35

tropical deforestation, biodiversity loss, and greenhouse gas emissions, espe-


cially in Indonesia and Malaysia, which together accounted for 85 percent of
world production in 2017 (USDA 2017, 19). In Indonesia, every year during
the dry season, fires are lit to clear land for oil palm plantations, contributing
significantly to climate change and smothering the region in a smoky haze as
forests, peatlands, and coal seams burn. Palm oil production has also contrib-
uted to widespread human rights abuses, as plantation owners take over lands
from subsistence farmers and indigenous communities, not only in Indonesia
and Malaysia but also increasingly in tropical Africa, Latin America, and other
countries of Asia.
Over the past few decades, activists have fought hard to reduce these costs.
Governments, corporations, and communities have pushed for reforms too. At
first glance, the gains would seem impressive. The Malaysian and Indonesian
governments have amended land-clearing policies, have set up certification pro-
grams, and are promising to allow only for the production of “sustainable” and
“responsible” palm oil. Notably, the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil
(RSPO), a multistakeholder, nonprofit organization with a vision to “transform
the markets by making sustainable palm oil the norm,” has steadily expanded
since launching in 2004 and, by 2017, was certifying nearly one-fifth of world
palm oil production as sustainable (Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil
[RSPO] 2017). At the same time, financial institutions (such as HSBC in
2017) have revised their lending policies for the palm oil industry, while states,
NGOs, and companies have signed on to initiatives to end palm oil production
that is contributing to tropical deforestation, such as the 2014 New York
Declaration on Forests. Across the global palm oil supply chain as a whole,
by the beginning of 2017, nearly 60 percent of firms had committed to strive
to end deforestation (Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 2017, 2), with just about Q1
every company that has a global brand—from Nestlé to Procter & Gamble to
McDonald’s—claiming to pursue a policy of “zero deforestation.”
Yet, despite this tidal wave of claims and promises, reducing the environ-
mental and social costs of the oil palm industry is proving elusive. In 2015
alone, fires across Indonesia, many set to clear forests and peatlands for oil
palm, scorched more than two million hectares, emitting as much carbon diox-
ide as the entire Brazilian economy that year (Purnomo et al. 2017). And even
more environmental and social costs are on the way as world production of
palm oil continues to expand across the tropics.
Why are governance efforts failing to significantly reduce the environmental
costs of palm oil production and consumption globally? The overview of global
food governance by Jennifer Clapp and Caitlin Scott (see Introduction to this
issue) offers helpful insights for investigating the politics underlying this failure.
In particular, they emphasize the value of exploring the intersection of industry
complexity and distancing, competing business and scientific narratives, power
inequalities and dynamics, and the nature of the policies and institutions
of governance. Considering industry complexity, at first glance, the high
36 • The Global Politics of the Business of “Sustainable” Palm Oil Q2

concentration of palm oil production in Indonesia and Malaysia might seem


to simplify the governance challenge. Indeed, forest, agricultural, and palm oil
policies look reasonable in these countries. Yet political corruption, power
inequities, and widespread illegalities have long undermined implementation
(Dauvergne 1997, 2001; Ross 2001; Straumann 2014). Moreover, the complex-
ity of the palm oil industry beyond these countries—characterized by long
supply chains, a great diversity of buyers, and a high substitutability across
end uses—has greatly increased the difficulty of effective governance, both frag-
menting and undermining interventions to improve management.
But domestic politics and industry complexity only partly explain why
palm oil governance is doing so little to reduce social and ecological costs. Sig-
nificantly, a narrative advocating for the development advantages of producing
and trading even more palm oil—though now calling it “sustainable”—has come
to dominate mainstream institutions and policy circles. This industry-friendly
narrative is directing criticism toward “unsustainable” production, with small-
holders blamed in particular for such production. It is positioning corporate
investment, international trade, and industrial-scale production as vital for con-
servation, food security, and rural development. And it is maintaining that
industry-guided certification and offsetting, corporate social responsibility
(CSR), voluntary compliance, and public–private partnerships are the most
efficient and effective ways to improve palm oil governance. Yet, as this article
shows, these supposed solutions are deflecting, hiding, and causing new prob-
lems within illegal political economies and across the complex global palm oil
landscape, while doing comparatively little to enhance environmental manage-
ment or community well-being.
I divide my analysis into three sections. To begin, I survey the global palm
oil industry to demonstrate the governance difficulties arising from the distanc-
ing effects of long and complex supply chains, the high fluidity of markets, and
the high substitutability of the end uses for palm oil. Next, I delineate the com-
peting narratives around the ecological and social consequences of palm oil,
documenting the growing influence of industry over the narrative, policies,
and institutions of palm oil governance. Finally, I turn to analyzing how power
dynamics and institutional outcomes combine to create a weak, fragmented,
and market-oriented governance structure for palm oil: one that is reinforcing
a global expansion of oil palm plantations while doing little to improve
management. I conclude the article by reflecting on the lessons from this anal-
ysis of the global environmental politics of palm oil for understanding the sus-
tainability of the global food system more generally.

The Global Palm Oil Industry


In the case of palm oil, as is true for most agricultural products, long supply
chains distance responsibility for damage both geographically and psychologi-
cally (Clapp 2015; Princen 2002). Tracing the source of palm oil is extremely
Peter Dauvergne • 37

difficult even with the high concentration of world production in Indonesia


(54% in 2016) and Malaysia (31% in 2016). There are tens of thousands of
different plantations across these two countries. Moreover, local firms with little
transparency control many of the plantations in places such as Sarawak, a
Malaysian state where profits from logging and palm oil have long financed po-
litical rulers, and where the state’s chief minister from 1981 to 2014 (who is
now the ceremonial head of state) accumulated a fortune of approximately
US$ 15 billion by the time he left office (Straumann 2014; Varkkey 2016).
Across Indonesia, where patronage is also a defining feature of the palm
oil industry, there are more than fourteen hundred private firms (many with ties
to Malaysia and Singapore) and fifteen state companies managing plantations
averaging approximately four thousand hectares in size. The number of firms,
however, is relatively small compared to the great array of smallholders. Typically
only two to five hectares in size, smallholdings comprise more than 40 percent
of Indonesia’s oil palm area, accounting for around one-third of production and
involving close to 1.5 million households. Although companies control one-
third of these smallholders through leasing and other agreements, the rest are
largely independent (especially those managing more than ten hectares) or are
part of a cooperative (Daemeter 2015, 1, 8).
This complex production terrain can make it very hard to pinpoint respon-
sibility for the clearing of forests to plant oil palm (Sustainable Palm Oil Trans-
parency Toolkit [SPOTT] 2017). In Indonesia, companies almost always blame
independent smallholders for illegally setting fires to clear land (often described
derogatorily as “slash-and-burn” agriculture). Plantation owners in Indonesia,
however, are known to pay locals to light fires, and land clearing for large-scale
agriculture has long involved illegally burning forests and peatlands, including
in parks and on indigenous lands (Anderson 2013; Pye and Bhattacharya 2013;
Varkkey 2012, 2016). For this reason, growers, local agents, brokers, and corpo-
rate processors—often protected by political patrons—commonly misreport
and falsify the origins of palm oil. Further complicating matters, around 90 percent
of oil palm smallholders in Indonesia do not hold legal land title; meanwhile,
some independent smallholders have also turned themselves into local “strong-
men,” clearing forests and peatlands with fire to establish oil palm estates of
one hundred hectares or more (Daemeter 2015, 8, 13). Rising demand since
2010 for certified palm oil has been compounding the difficulty of tracing oil palm
supply chains, as local agents, traders, refineries, millers, and processors “launder”
uncertified oil by mixing it into batches certified as sustainable and conflict-free
(Greenpeace International 2013, 3).
Palm oil supply chains, moreover, are becoming more complex and opaque
as production expands beyond Malaysia and Indonesia and into new areas with
equal, if not greater, levels of corruption, violent land grabbing, unclear corpo-
rate landholdings, misreporting and smuggling, and weak implementation of
regulations. Rising demand for palm oil partly explains this expansion. World
palm oil production has grown rapidly over the past three decades, and analysts
38 • The Global Politics of the Business of “Sustainable” Palm Oil

are expecting growth to continue over the next few years. Grand View Research
(2016), for example, is predicting that global palm oil production in 2022 will
be almost 75 percent higher than it was in 2014, with market worth rising from
US$ 61 billion to US$ 88 billion. In recent years, investment in oil palm pro-
duction has been rising across Central and West Africa (although the oil palm
tree is native to West Africa, the region has historically only produced small
quantities of palm oil, primarily for local consumption). And industry analysts
are now projecting that palm oil production in countries such as Cameroon and
Liberia will increase quickly over the next few decades, with Central and West
Africa one day possibly even rivaling Malaysia and Indonesia as a global pro-
ducer and exporter of palm oil and palm oil kernels (Kelly 2016).
Coupled with the distancing of consumers from environmental conse-
quences, the very high and growing interchangeability of the end uses of palm
oil presents another difficult challenge for global governance. In recent years,
roughly two-thirds of palm oil has been used for cooking and deep-frying, with
health warnings and new regulations for trans fats helping to stimulate demand
in baked goods and processed foods (palm oil does not contain trans fats,
although it is high in saturated fat). Increasing utilization of palm oil and palm
kernel oil for other uses—animal feed, cosmetics, personal hygiene products,
and biofuels—has also been driving up palm oil sales over the past decade.
Rising demand for biocosmetics, biodetergents, and biolubricants, as well as
government regulations to promote biofuels, has further pushed up consump-
tion (Grand View Research 2016).
As the end uses of palm oil have diversified, the variety and number of
markets and buyers have increased. Malaysian and Singaporean firms do wield
substantial influence over the production and distribution of palm oil from
industrial-scale plantations in Malaysia and Indonesia (Hamilton-Hart 2015),
and a single company, Singapore’s Wilmar International, controls approxi-
mately 45 percent of world trade in palm oil. There is, however, no dominant
market or corporate end user. In 2015, for instance, the palm oil purchases of
137 leading retail, food-service, and manufacturing companies only added up
to about 6 million metric tons, or 10 percent of world production ( World
Wide Fund for Nature 2016, 3). Palm oil sales are also spread over a wide array
of developing and developed countries. India, where palm oil is widely used
for cooking, was the leading consumer in 2017, accounting for 16 percent of
world consumption, almost all of which was imported. Indonesia was second
at 15 percent, followed by the European Union (10%), China (8%), Pakistan
(5%), Malaysia (5%), Thailand (4%), and Bangladesh (2.5%). Next on the list
were the United States and Nigeria, each accounting for a little over 2 percent
of global consumption (USDA 2017, 19).
Because of the high product substitutability, high fluidity of buyers, and
wide market distribution for palm oil, regulating or taxing one industry or
national market more strictly can quickly deflect sales into new uses and juris-
dictions. Over the past decade, for instance, a global activist campaign to target
Peter Dauvergne • 39

the palm oil sourcing practices of global brands—ones such as Unilever, Nestlé,
Procter & Gamble, and McDonald’s—has shifted the purchasing patterns of
brand corporations toward products certified by the Roundtable on Sustain-
able Palm Oil (Dauvergne 2017). This has been a boon for the RSPO, which
certified 19 percent of world palm oil production in 2016 as sustainable, up from
10 percent in 2011 (or from 5 million metric tons in 2011 to nearly 12 million
metric tons in 2016; RSPO 2017). Yet at the same time, the consumption of
unbranded and uncertified cooking oil for low-income households has gone
up in countries such as India, where imports neared 10 million metric tons in
2017—two times more than in 2007 (USDA 2011, 13; USDA 2017, 19). Con-
sumption of uncertified palm oil is also dispersing across the developing world,
with imports into Central and South America, for instance, growing especially
quickly in recent years (Grand View Research 2016).

Contested Palm Oil Narratives


Competing narratives of palm oil sustainability and unsustainability swirl
inside this complex industry and across the governance landscape, with sharp
differences across countries and between advocates and critics. The most vocal
proponents of palm oil tend to reside inside the governments and industry
associations of Malaysia and Indonesia, although strong support for increasing
the production of what advocates call sustainable palm oil has also come from
those working in transnational corporations (TNCs), nonprofit organizations
such as the RSPO, and international organizations such as the Food and Agricul-
ture Organization (FAO) and the World Bank (as a way of earning foreign
exchange and supporting development). On occasion, as Malaysia and Indonesia
jockey for export markets and price premiums, domestic and international palm
oil supporters have clashed openly over definitions, strategies, and what consti-
tutes best practices, although the common goal of wanting to expand produc-
tion and consumption has helped diffuse tensions.
Of course, many individuals within these countries and organizations
have also expressed concerns over the environmental and social consequences
of oil palm plantations. The most outspoken and sustained criticism, however,
has come from human rights and environmental activists. Those affiliated with
local NGOs, such as Indonesia’s Sawit Watch ( Jiwan 2013), Indonesia’s envi-
ronmental forum Wahana Lingkungan Hidup Indonesia (known as WALHI),
and Malaysia’s Sahabat Alam Malaysia have been highly critical; so have those
campaigning for international NGOs, such as the Rainforest Action Network
and Greenpeace. Scholarly work has also been very critical of the environmen-
tal and human rights consequences of the palm oil industry (e.g., Anderson
2013; Cramb and McCarthy 2016; Gillespie 2012; Hamilton-Hart 2015;
McCarthy et al. 2012; Nesadurai 2013; Pichler 2015; Pye and Bhattacharya
2013; Schleifer 2016).
40 • The Global Politics of the Business of “Sustainable” Palm Oil

Some critics go as far as describing oil palm in countries like Malaysia and
Indonesia as little more than an invasive species. The oil palm tree, which was
first transplanted from West Africa to Indonesia in the mid-1800s, covered as
much as 27 million hectares worldwide in 2017, an area roughly equal to
New Zealand (SPOTT 2017, 4; SPOTT’s lower-end estimate is 20 million hect-
ares). Rain forest activists highlight the grave consequences for biodiversity and
endangered species, such as for orangutans and Sumatran tigers. Greenpeace
International (2016, 1), for example, describes the consequences of palm oil
plantations as “catastrophic” for Indonesian rain forests and wildlife. Critics
further note the contribution to climate change of both the burning down of
forests, which emits carbon, and the processing of palm oil, which emits
methane. Oil palm plantations and mills, they add, also disrupt ecosystem services,
destroy peatlands, and pollute waterways, including with waste, fertilizers, and
pesticides (Gillespie 2012; Jiwan 2013).
The expansion of oil palm plantations, many critics add, has tended to
aggravate social inequalities and breed conflict (Abram et al. 2017; Cramb
and Sujang 2011; Jiwan 2013). These critics claim that companies stir up
animosity within communities by exploiting land tenure uncertainties, ejecting
indigenous people as “squatters,” misleading communities on their share of the
profits, and manipulating participation and consent processes (Anderson 2013;
Cramb and McCarthy 2016; Lunkapis 2013; Prabowo et al. 2017). The transfor-
mation of the state of Sarawak, Malaysia, has been especially dramatic, with oil
palm now covering more than 1 million hectares (up from 23,000 hectares in
1980): a straight-up “land grab” to prop up a corrupt system of “political
patronage,” according to Rob Cramb (2016, 192) at the University of Queensland.
Some critics add that large-scale plantations frequently exploit workers as well
(Li 2017) and, contrary to company claims, offer few lasting economic benefits
for communities (Rhein 2015). The Rainforest Action Network (2017), for
instance, describes various palm oil plantations in Malaysia and Indonesia as
exploiting child labor and practicing modern-day slavery (see also Amnesty
International 2016).
This critical narrative contains some important differences in emphasis.
Some critics focus on the harm from expanding industrial plantations into
forested areas. Others oppose large-scale oil palm plantations but at the same
time advocate for more small-scale planting on already deforested land, arguing
that this can generate vital income for poorer families and supply inexpensive
cooking oil for low-income households. This diversity of criticism, emphasis,
and proposed ways forward offers many opportunities for advocates of palm
oil to push back against opponents. Critics have clearly raised global awareness
of the environmental and social costs of palm oil. Nevertheless, advocates have
managed to channel much of this criticism into a narrative emphasizing that
these concerns only apply to “unsustainable” oil palm plantations and that
“verified” and “transparent” certification, stakeholder partnerships, and volun-
tary CSR offer pathways to expand industrial plantations, the palm oil trade,
Peter Dauvergne • 41

and the uses and consumption of palm oil under the labels of sustainable,
responsible, and conflict-free.
This industry narrative is gaining strength in part by emphasizing the value
of investing in sustainable palm oil as a way of generating income, jobs, and
foreign exchange, both locally and nationally. Oil palm is especially suitable
for large-scale agriculture, advocates contend, as it yields much higher rates of
return per area planted than other vegetable oil crops. Already, they note, the in-
dustry is worth approximately US$ 20 billion a year in countries like Indonesia,
with even higher earnings possible. Advocates of commercial oil palm plantations
often speak of the value for modeling “climate-smart” agriculture. They generally
accept the value of smallholder production but also note that company-run plan-
tations are more productive per hectare—and thus more efficient—than small-
holder farms (Daemeter 2015, 11). They also tend to claim that most of the
expansion into forested areas, including by burning forests and peatlands, is done
by smallholders, and rarely, if ever, are large-scale plantations (at least ones pro-
ducing certified palm oil) implicated in deforestation.
There are differences in emphasis within this overarching industry narra-
tive of the value of expanding the production of so-called sustainable palm oil.
Since the 1990s, the governments of Indonesia and Malaysia have been partic-
ularly staunch defenders of the merits of oil palm plantations, with both
governments putting in place incentives and policies to increase palm oil ex-
ports (Cramb and Sujang 2011; Potter 2012; Jiwan 2013; Hamilton-Hart
2015, 169–173). To some extent, competition between Malaysia and Indonesia
for palm oil markets has amplified differences in the tone of domestic and
international advocacy for oil palm plantations. Back in 1990, confronting a
growing global activist campaign to save the rain forests of Borneo, the Malaysian
government set up the Malaysian Palm Oil Council to protect the industry’s rep-
utation overseas. Today, the council does not shy away from stating its mission:
“To promote the market expansion of Malaysian palm oil and its products by
enhancing the image of palm oil” (see www.mpoc.org.my). Malaysia’s and
Indonesia’s palm oil industries have also each formed associations to further
promote their interests and reputations. The Malaysian Palm Oil Association,
established in 1999, has a mission similar to the Malaysian Palm Oil Council:
“to inspire the sustainability of oil palm and other plantation crops for long
term profitability and growth” (see http://mpoa.org.my). The Indonesian Palm
Oil Association, set up in 1981, also speaks of “empowering sustainability,”
claiming that it is advancing the expansion of sustainable production and
sustainable exports (see GAPKI 2016).
The Malaysian and Indonesian palm oil associations both emphasize the
value of commercializing and trading palm oil in overseas markets as a way to
reduce poverty and thus promote food security by increasing household incomes
within farming communities (GAPKI 2016; Malaysian Palm Oil Certification
Council [MPOCC] 2017). Sometimes they go even further and describe palm
oil as a healthy and nutritional staple food for billions of people. The Malaysian
42 • The Global Politics of the Business of “Sustainable” Palm Oil

Palm Oil Council, for instance, runs Palm Oil Health (www.palmoilhealth.org),
which is dedicated to supplying “breaking news and industry research” on what it
claims is Malaysian palm oil’s “exciting potential for supporting cardiovascular
and neurological health.” International advocates of palm oil would rarely make
such claims. Differences in emphasis and tone within the global palm oil indus-
try, however, have not impeded the strengthening power of the overarching
industry narrative of sustainable palm oil. As the next section discusses, though,
recent moves by Malaysia and Indonesia to bypass the RSPO and capture
sustainable palm oil markets through domestic certification schemes are further
weakening and fragmenting governance.

Governing the Business of Palm Oil


For those critical of the environmental consequences of palm oil, figuring out
where, and how, to intervene to improve governance is difficult given the com-
plexity of the industry. Should one focus on improving forest, land tenure, and
palm production policies in Indonesia and Malaysia? Should one focus on
enforcement of current regulations? Should one develop regional agreements,
such as the 2002 Transboundary Haze Pollution Agreement of the Association
of Southeast Asian Nations? Should one pressure international banks to reform
lending policies? Should one establish financing programs to support conserva-
tion and reforms to land management, such as the United Nations program for
Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (+Conservation),
or REDD+? Should one aim to improve and extend certification? Or should one
perhaps rely on educational campaigns and ecoconsumerism to influence brand
manufacturers and global supply chains?
All of these efforts are occurring—and so is industry resistance to any effort
that threatens profitability. The result is a governance landscape that is multi-
layered, very complicated, and constantly shifting: a patchwork of crisscrossing
domestic regulations, international programs, financing schemes, market sig-
nals, private voluntary initiatives, and NGO pressures. Some of this governance
is functioning reasonably well, but some is also clearly functioning intermit-
tently, poorly, or not all. Some critics, such as Natasha Hamilton-Hart (2015,
164), argue that palm oil governance is better understood as “misgovernance,”
which for her is “not an unintended consequence of institutions failing to keep
up with markets in scale and scope, but is embedded in the multilevel gover-
nance regime that supports, and partially regulates, the industry.”
Looking across this diverse, patchy, and fragmented governance landscape
does reveal, however, a clear pattern over the past decade: the institutions and
policies of palm oil governance have increasingly come to reflect the narrative
and interests of business. The Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 (TFA), a multi-
stakeholder initiative comprising governments, business, and civil society
groups, is one manifestation of the institutionalization of the pro-industry
narrative. Founded in 2012 at the urging of the Consumer Goods Forum, this
Peter Dauvergne • 43

alliance claims to aim to reduce by 2020 the consequences for tropical defor-
estation of pulp and paper, beef, soy, and palm oil production: what it de-
scribes as a commitment “to end commodity-driven tropical deforestation.”
The language of public–private partnerships, collaboration with business,
and voluntary industry commitments is central to the discourse of the TFA.
“Partnership is critical to … success,” the TFA (2017, 3) writes. “Companies
should feel comfortable making bold commitments knowing that the global
community is behind them. Governments and civil society should see that
now more than ever there is the need to collaborate with business and be part
of the transition to deforestation-free commodities” (3). The 2016 Marrakesh
Declaration, signed by countries in Central and West Africa at the 22nd Confer-
ence of the Parties to the 1992 UN Framework Convention on Climate Change,
is an example of initiatives by the TFA. Signatories pledged to “develop and pro-
mote a sustainable oil palm sector that delivers increasing yields and secures
increased production while: bringing jobs to our people; providing fair and
equitable labour conditions; working to improve community livelihoods; and
contributing to food security and poverty alleviation through equitable benefit
sharing” (Tropical Forest Alliance 2016, 3).
The RSPO is the most visible manifestation of this pro-business narrative
of sustainability. The RSPO was set up in 2004 with the backing of the World
Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and the Anglo-Dutch consumer goods company
Unilever, which at the time was looking for ways to reduce growing criticism of
its palm oil sourcing. Zurich, Switzerland, is the legal home of the association,
but the secretariat is in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and there is a branch office in
Jakarta, Indonesia. It is a private, third-party certification organization and
excludes governments as formal members. RSPO’s market coverage has been
growing steadily, with a fivefold rise in RSPO-certified palm oil from 2010 to
2016. Today, the RSPO has more than thirty-six hundred members, with 51 per-
cent of its Certified Sustainable Palm Oil (CSPO) coming from Indonesia and
42 percent coming from Malaysia in 2016 (RSPO 2018).
To some extent, the RSPO is helping some palm oil producers and buyers
to improve environmental and social practices (Nesadurai 2013; Teoh 2013).
Yet there is also no question that industry wields a great deal of influence over
the definitions, policies, and programs of the RSPO (Hamilton-Hart 2015;
McCarthy 2012; Pichler 2013; Ruysschaert 2016). We can see this industry in-
fluence in its governance. The co-chairs of the board of governors at the start of
2018, for instance, were from Unilever and United Plantations (a Malaysian oil
palm plantation company). The Malaysian Palm Oil Association, which, as we
saw earlier, has a mandate to promote Malaysia’s palm oil industry, was instru-
mental in establishing the RSPO, including its certification standards; moreover,
since then, the Malaysian Palm Oil Association has remained influential in the
governance of the RSPO (Hamilton-Hart 2015, 174; Teoh 2013, 36).
We can also see the influence of business in the discourse and claims of
the RSPO, which frequently borders on open advocacy for more palm oil
44 • The Global Politics of the Business of “Sustainable” Palm Oil

production and consumption. RSPO “factsheets” emphasize the versatility of


uses, the efficiency of yields, and the affordability for poorer households as well
as palm oil’s value for reducing poverty and promoting sustainability in devel-
oping countries. One factsheet, for instance, notes that oil palm is “GMO-free”
and declares that it “is a more sustainable source of vegetable oil than other oil
crops” (RSPO Secretariat, 2008). The RSPO website (www.rspo.org), under the
tab “About RSPO” and the subtab “Sustainable Palm Oil,” lists five reasons for a
“need” for even more palm oil production, asserting that it “fulfills increasing
global food demand,” “supports affordable food prices,” “supports poverty
reduction,” “safeguards social interests, communities and workers,” and “pro-
tects the environment and wildlife.”
Over the past decade, the WWF has been pushing for reforms within the
RSPO and does not shy away from occasionally criticizing the organization pub-
licly (World Wide Fund for Nature 2016). Since 2004, many other environmental
and conservation NGOs have joined the RSPO, with thirty-eight NGO members
as of January 2018, including WWF Switzerland, WWF Malaysia, WWF Indonesia,
and WWF International. These NGOs participate for a variety of reasons and with
a variety of goals, including striving to reform the RSPO from the inside
(Ruysschaert and Salles 2016). Many rain forest activists, however, see the RSPO
as little more than a tool of industry, arguing that these NGOs have been coopted
to legitimize the organization’s true purpose: to expand oil palm plantations.
Critics further note that the RSPO tends to favor large-scale growers and pro-
cessors (Azhar et al. 2017; Brandi et al. 2015; Pichler 2013; Ruysschaert 2016;
Saadun et al. 2018), while having little power to prevent growers and processors
from illicitly gaining certification. In addition, critics point out that the RSPO was
mainly designed to certify South–North trade and supply chains, and in recent
years, rising exports of uncertified palm oil into developing economies such as
India have been counteracting many of the gains from certifying palm oil for
brand corporations and Western markets (Schleifer 2016; Schleifer and Sun
2018). Moreover, although interest in RSPO-certified palm oil would appear to
be rising in China (Schleifer and Sun 2018), overall, the RSPO has limited capac-
ity to reach into the highly fragmented palm oil markets of the developing world,
where the vast majority of importing firms have little interest in paying certifica-
tion premiums and where large numbers of small retailers are selling a great array
of unbranded products containing palm oil (Schleifer 2016, 53–55).
Rain forest activists have been especially critical of RSPO programs (e.g.,
“GreenPalm” and “mass balance”) that allow buyers to claim “certification” yet
do not actually guarantee that all of the palm oil purchased meets RSPO stan-
dards (as is the case for what RSPO calls “segregated” palm oil). Greenpeace
International (2013) argues that the RSPO is doing little more than “certifying
destruction.” The comments of Bustar Maitar of Greenpeace International and
head of the Indonesia Forest Campaign are typical: “RSPO, from my perspec-
tive, has been used for greenwashing by companies who want to expand their
plantations into the forest” (quoted in Gies 2014).
Peter Dauvergne • 45

Overall, critics assert, the RSPO is doing very little to enhance biodiversity
conservation, protect endangered species such as Sumatran orangutans
(Ruysschaert and Salles 2014), or even stop the clearing of forests and peatlands
in countries such as Indonesia (Greenpeace International 2013). A key reason,
the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) argues, is the auditing processes
underlying RSPO certification. “Auditing firms are fundamentally failing to
identify and mitigate unsustainable practices by oil palm firms,” the EIA finds.
“Not only are they conducting woefully substandard assessments but the evi-
dence indicates that in some cases they are colluding with plantation companies
to disguise violations of the RSPO Standard.” The RSPO, the EIA concludes, in
effect functions as a “firewall” to help protect palm oil buyers from criticism
(Environmental Investigation Agency 2015, 3).
Despite Indonesia having considerable influence within the RSPO, after
several TNCs ended contracts to purchase Indonesian palm oil (Brandi et al.
2013, 55), the Indonesian Ministry of Agriculture decreed a mandatory certifi-
cation scheme for palm oil in 2009 (aiming to pilot the scheme in 2011 and
eventually require all producers to comply). In part, the government set up this
new public standard—what in English translates as “Indonesian Sustainable
Palm Oil,” or ISPO—to gain more control and reduce foreign influence over
the monitoring, auditing, and evaluation of palm oil certification ( Wijaya
and Glasbergen 2016). The government also wanted to establish a lower-cost
certification option for smallholders and local corporations (Brandi et al.
2013, 57). Although the government has struggled to gain international recog-
nition and price premiums for its certification standard (Macleod 2017), and
although only around one-quarter of Indonesia’s palm oil corporations were
ISPO-certified by mid-2017 ( Jakarta Post 2017), the government continues to
present ISPO publicly as both a way to improve environmental management
and as a strategy to increase Indonesian palm oil exports.
Revealingly, Indonesia’s certification standard is easier to meet than the
RSPO’s, even more in line with Indonesian corporate interests, and allows firms
to label exports as sustainably produced without going through the RSPO
(Wijaya and Glasbergen 2016, 240). Not to be outdone, in 2013, the Malaysian
government announced its own certification scheme, known as Malaysian
Sustainable Palm Oil (MSPO). Operational since 2015, once again, industry
interests dominate, and as with both the ISPO and the RSPO, the organization
is reinforcing a narrative emphasizing the value for economic growth and com-
munity well-being of producing and exporting even more palm oil (MPOCC
2017). The discourse of the MSPO frequently sounds more like marketing than
standard setting. Typical is the following from MSPO’s (2017) Palm Oil Health
division:
Chefs may prefer Madagascar vanilla, Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese and
Irish butter. Many foodies appreciate New York pizza, Florida oranges and
Sumatran coffee. There is another food for which geography is important,
46 • The Global Politics of the Business of “Sustainable” Palm Oil

Malaysian palm oil. Thankfully a new certification, Malaysian Sustainable


Palm Oil (MSPO), may help you identify this high-end ingredient in your
favorite products.

Even though MSPO certification will be mandatory for all Malaysian palm oil
producers as of 2019, Palm Oil Health (2017) concludes that “MSPO certification
is exclusively for premium-quality palm oil sustainably grown and produced in
Malaysia, a recognized leader in responsible palm oil production.”

Conclusions
Over the past decade, as activists have raised awareness of the costs and risks of
oil palm production, some growers have eliminated some of the worst practices,
and most buyers with global brands have shifted toward purchasing offset
certificates and certified palm oil, especially from the RSPO. Yet, as this article
documents, the palm oil industry has not passively stood around under this
barrage of criticism. It has become far more proactive, engaging and reshaping
criticisms and channeling discourses, policies, and governing institutions
toward a dichotomy of unsustainable and sustainable palm oil.
The resulting narrative blames unsustainable palm oil production—especially
by independent smallholders—for causing deforestation, degradation, and vio-
lence. At the same time, the industry narrative emphasizes the value of expand-
ing industrial production, corporate investment, global trade, and markets for
so-called sustainable palm oil, not only as an edible oil for foods but also for
cosmetics, hygiene products, and fuels. Such expansion is presented as helpful,
even essential, for conservation, food security, and the prosperity of indige-
nous and local communities in tropical countries. Organizations such as the
Malaysian Palm Oil Council, the Malaysian Palm Oil Association, the Indonesian
Palm Oil Association, the RSPO, and the TFA are legitimizing and disseminating
this narrative, as the case of the 2016 Marrakesh Declaration for Central and West
Africa shows. Transnational agricultural firms and global brand buyers are further
enhancing the power and reach of this industry-friendly narrative, especially
among consumers, but also within governments and advocacy organizations.
This overarching industry narrative does not mean that the oil palm industry is
united or even cooperative, and, as this article showed, in some ways, compe-
tition among palm oil producers is further fragmenting and weakening gover-
nance. Certification schemes such as ISPO and MSPO, for instance, are clearly
trying to help domestic oil palm growers, processors, and exporters meet rising
international demand for certified palm oil without needing to go through the
more internationally oriented RSPO.
The narrative of sustainable palm oil offers an enticing vision for going for-
ward: more income, more jobs, and more development for poor countries with-
out causing deforestation, land-clearing fires, or conflict within communities.
However, this scenario rarely plays out as expansion-oriented and trade-focused
Peter Dauvergne • 47

corporations extract profits out of a highly fragmented and weakly governed


global palm oil industry. In many ways, palm oil certification and offsetting
are doing more to appease critics and reassure customers than improve manage-
ment. Hoping to nudge along “laggards,” for instance, it is now common for
rain forest activists to describe global brands (e.g., Nestlé, Hershey’s, and
McDonald’s) that are promising to purchase CSPO as “leaders,” “front-runners,”
and “forest-friendly.” Yet, as we saw in this article, industry dominates the ISPO,
MSPO, and RSPO, and even in the case of the more independent RSPO, at least
some of what the organization is calling CSPO is continuing to cause defores-
tation, climate change, biodiversity loss, and local food insecurity and conflict.
Approximately 90 percent of the RSPO’s certified palm oil comes from Malaysia
and Indonesia, places where bribery, smuggling, and forged documentation
have long plagued land and forest management. In this context, the mixing
of uncertified palm oil into batches labeled as sustainable is a growing problem.
Furthermore, producing and selling more certified palm oil is not translating
into less deforestation, as palm oil demand has shifted production into
unbranded markets, new uses, and new sources of palm oil across Africa, Asia,
and Latin America.
What insights does this analysis of the global politics of the business of
palm oil offer for those trying to govern the world food system for greater sus-
tainability? First, as Clapp and Scott highlight in the Introduction to this issue,
high industry complexity, the distancing of consumption, and the increasing
fragmentation of governance are creating major challenges for the pursuit of
global sustainability. Complexity, as the case of palm oil shows, can increase
for many reasons, such as more producers across more countries, more inter-
mediaries and longer supply chains, more buyers as consumption spreads,
and more diverse forms of consumption. Governance within a particular TNC
supply chain—such as Walmart’s one hundred thousand first-tier suppliers—
has been consolidating somewhat as TNCs realize the business advantages of
tracking, auditing, and pushing suppliers to reduce waste and inefficiencies
(Dauvergne and Lister 2013; LeBaron et al. 2017). Still, the broader expansion
of global production, certification schemes, and varieties of consumption is
further fragmenting governance, with new environmental and social conse-
quences emerging far from the centers of power.
Second, as Clapp and Scott further underline, and as the case of palm oil
confirms, the sustainability narratives for global agriculture can be usefully un-
derstood as arising out of cycles of contestation, with unceasing struggles to con-
trol and reframe discourses within particular political economies (Neville
2015). Grassroots and civil society resistance to corporate and state power is
clearly ongoing, even as more NGOs embrace the business narrative of palm
oil sustainability. Importantly, however, the analysis of palm oil points to the
power of industry to defuse resistance by channeling criticism into a category
of “unsustainable” agriculture, while simultaneously building support for ex-
panding corporate investment, industrial production, and the global trade of
48 • The Global Politics of the Business of “Sustainable” Palm Oil

so-called sustainable agricultural products. The analysis further shows how the
industry narrative of sustainability helps sideline far-reaching critiques of the
global agricultural system, such as the increasing concentration of corporate
power, the injustices of the global industrial food complex, and the neoliberal
policy advice of international development agencies such as the FAO and the
World Bank. It also demonstrates the power of the agrifood industry to margin-
alize movements calling for across-the-board reforms to the global agricultural
system, such as prioritizing “food sovereignty”—the idea that land and food
production should primarily serve the nutritional and cultural needs of farming
households, agricultural communities, and indigenous peoples (Clapp 2016;
Clapp and Fuchs 2009; Fuchs and Kalfagianni 2010).
Finally, and relatedly, the analysis of palm oil reveals the ways the narra-
tive around the dichotomy of unsustainable–sustainable is translating into pol-
icies and institutions to support the interests of TNCs profiting from large-scale
agricultural production and trade. These policies and institutions are doing
far more to advance the commercialization, “trade-ification” (Clapp 2017),
intensification, and industrialization of global agriculture than to promote
ecological sustainability on a global scale. There is clearly, as Clapp and Scott
urge in the Introduction to this issue, a need for more research on the con-
sequences of the politics of how ecosystems and food governance intersect,
especially by those trying to understand why global food governance is so
often failing to prevent the social and environmental costs of agriculture from
continuing to rise.

Peter Dauvergne is a professor of international relations at the University of


British Columbia. His books include Will Big Business Destroy Our Planet? (Polity,
2018), Environmentalism of the Rich (MIT, 2016; recipient of the Michael Harrington
Book Award), Protest Inc. (with Genevieve LeBaron; Polity, 2014), Eco-Business (with
Jane Lister; MIT, 2013), and The Shadows of Consumption (MIT, 2008; recipient of
the Gerald L. Young Book Award). He is the founding editor of Global Environ-
mental Politics.

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