CEO MPOC
Tan Sri Dr. Yusof Basiron is facing criticism over
his statements involving
the oil palms' "invasion" of the natural forests that if Malaysia
aspires to be a developed country; it has to follow other developed countries
by reducing its forest to a more sustainable ratio such as 33 per cent. It gets
no reward or compensation for maintaining more than 50 per cent of its land as
forest. Such moves hamper the country's effort to become a developed nation as
it is not able to unlock its national land assets as practiced by other
developed countries."
IRIM President (the Malaysian Institute of Foresters),
Dato' Prof. Dr. Hj. Abd. Rahman Bin Hj. Abd. Rahim in responding the statements
said: “This is a baffling set of statements. Coming from the head
of MPOC (the Malaysian Palm Oil Council), it is all the more bizarre, ...
rather unbelievable. We can only speculate that the Malaysian oil palm industry
has been under continuous pressure from environmentalists the world over, with
criticisms pointed at oil palms' "invasion" of the natural forests -
in this instance, Malaysia's much valued rainforests."
"This has led CEO Tan Sri Dr. Yusof Basiron to
react, often branding the attacks as competitors' smear tactics. "
"It was probably in that sentiment that Tan Sri
Yusof made those remarks in NST. But to readers in this country, the
comments reflect negatively on his thinking. To foresters, this is
preposterous. They view this kind of disposition as sectoral mind-set where oil
palm is seen The savior to the nation's economy and that oil palms should
replace forest, and do the job."
IRIM's concern
"MPOC is obviously indifferent to the
non-monetary, biodiversity wealth of our natural forest and the environmental
services it provides. His view that forests are less worthy than oil palm does
not take into account those attributes. The universal call: "Save the
Rainforest" is construed as a subtle move to stop Malaysia from advancing
its economy, rather than a precautionary appeal to maintain its already fragile
ecological balance."
"We, at IRIM (Institut Rimbawan Malaysia) must
express consternation about Tan Sri Yusof's stand that the country needs to
reduce forest cover to a third of the country's land area because having half
of the country under forest today "hampers" national development. So,
forests are antithesis to national development! This is a sad
indictment. But the premise simply does not hold water. We are not
convinced that Malaysia will effectively emerge as a developed country by
"unlocking its national land assets" to oil palm as the case of the
now developed nations."
"Europe lost most of their forests during
Industrial Revolutions two-three centuries ago, and America, during 1820-1870.
To suggest that Malaysia emulate developed countries and remove most of its
forests is to send us back to the poverty days of Europe centuries ago. We have
cleared enough forest for FELDA in 1960 - 1970s to raise the economy of the
rural people. If grand deforestation does take place again, it will have little
to do with eradicating poverty."
"True, oil palms have great capacity for carbon
adsorption, just as other vigorously growing tree crops. But the process of
establishing plantation, especially the large scale burning of peat forests,
scientists claim, will release billions of tonnes of carbon, contributing to
global warming. The same area will be due for replanting and a repeat session
of carbon emission, even before the crop can make up for the previous
pollution."
Lacking in congruence
"MPOC's ideas about deforestation are incongruous
with government's aspirations under ETP whose primary aims is making Malaysia
"a high-income nation that is both inclusive and sustainable by
2020." Sustainable growth is about "meeting present needs without compromising
those of future generations." It must be stressed here that "present
needs" should not be interpreted as merely economic needs. High-income
status is to be achieved in balance with the security of the natural
environment. "
The ETP adds: "In economic terms, growth will
have to be achieved without running down Malaysia’s natural
resources..... In environmental terms, the Government is committed to
the stewardship and preservation of our natural environment and non-renewable
resources. The Government will ensure that environmental resources are properly
priced and that the full costs of development are understood before investment
decisions are made."
"The 33 per cent forest cover suggested by Tan
Sri Yusof as "sustainable" level, for Malaysia is way below the
government's declared 50 per cent forest cover made during the 1992 Earth
Summit, and again at the 2009 Copenhagen Accord."
Capital for development
"In today's competitive and high-technology
world, Malaysia continues to be over reliant on natural resources as capital
for economic development. ETP works towards overcoming this weakness. In line
with the more progressive economies it encourages the use of alternative
capital assets such technology (electronics), intellectual prowess (R&D,
innovation), talent and acumen. (There are still many young Malaysian graduates
who prefer to stay behind in the countries of their studies, or work elsewhere,
because of lack of demand here for their acquired expertise). "
"Europe and America went through the
deforestation process in Industrial Revolution times because they had no option
but to use land as capital for development. With the availability of today's
technology and infrastructure would they ever think of devastating their
forests for development? In our case, today we have the choice. We are in
the world of science and technology, we have entrepreneurs and well trained and
educated human capital, and we have local and foreign financial resources
besides our own natural resources. In other words, we have several different
means to help build the economy. Why do we need to repeat what Europe and
America did to their forests? "
A growth engine and its challenges
The oil palm industry is one of the eleven industries
selected as the growth engines of the ETP. They are identified in the ETP as
the National Key Economic Areas (NKEAs).
"The oil palm plantation industries of Malaysia
would know better:producing for export palm oil for domestic use has a limited
future in view of the pending competition from Indonesia's massive expansion
programmes. Reluctance of owners of local producers to do replanting for
reasons of temporary loss of income will not help with improving productivity.
Malaysia is losing out to Indonesia in the fundamentals: production cost and
volume of output per hectare (Indonesia has better site qualities in terms of
topography and natural soil fertility) and huge capacities for expansion."
"The key growth factors that point to Indonesia's
advantage for example are the obvious availability and lower cost of labour,
Malaysia's minimum wage policies for labourers which are going to hit the
industry hard, and not the least, the returning to Indonesia of now higher
skilled workers, with prospects of higher positions, having benefited from
their experiences in Malaysia. "
"Apart from increasing FFB yield and speeding up
replanting when replanting is due MPOC is presumably focusing on maintaining
the quality of products in hand, and stepping up efforts to create value-added
products, such as bio-fuel, and by-products such as oleo derivatives, and
perhaps "new" non-oil products based on oil palm fibre."
"MPOC is already heading in this direction. In
other words, the strategy option for the future is downstream. By opting
to turn away from clearing new areas of forest land, MPOC will be making
significant contributions towards the conservation of the country's forest
ecosystem."
Conclusion
"The oil palm industry leadership at MPOC knows
best where its competitive strengths and advantages lie. At IRIM we feel
that increasing production of palm oil may not necessarily be the best way to
combat threats of competition. A commodity price war with Indonesia will
be an exercise in futility. Moral elements need to be taken into account.
Further deforestation for economic benefits must not ignore the burdens to
future generations of ecological losses."
"On the other hand, taking the leadership in
raising the value chain through technology and scientific research is the logical
step to take for the industry. It is a case of developing a variety of value
added or "new" high quality products as opposed to producing palm oil
as purely a commodity item. Modern day palm oil research and management will
help strike a balance between profitability and security of the
environment."
"We need government's help to resolve this palm
oil - forest conservation conundrum perhaps through multi-stakeholder dialogues
with discourse on environmental economics and natural resource management, to
ensure sustainable development is achieved for posterity. In protecting the
environment, Government ought to institute strong policies that will require
factoring the ecological values into economic considerations in all cases of
land use."
"In seeking harmony of man with nature, the
government needs to weigh a situation much more deeply than the traditional
throwing of ready-made policy dices. A revisit of existing land use policies is
needed. Past decisions based on the simple guidelines of the much outdated
Second Malaysia Plan (1970) LCCS (Land Capability Classification Survey), has
cost the government incalculable losses of valuable forest land or devastation
of ecologically vulnerable sites. Natural resources are getting scarce."
"We need to allow the Precautionary Principle to
stand out as a point of reference before arriving at decisions on land use.
This is crucial. We do not want to reach a point of time when people are
telling us that we are no longer capable of meeting the needs of future
generations."
"Forestry and oil palm industry must not be
opponents, but instead, exponents in matters of balanced use of natural
resources while securing a foundation for sustainable economic development.
Minor forest produce, pharmaceutical plants on one hand and palm oleo
derivatives, palm fibre and mill wastes, all have potentials to offer economic
benefits to mankind - perhaps much more than what we know today. As responsible
citizens, people in forestry and the oil palm industry can work hand in hand in
optimising the use of natural resources before them while assuring continuity
of benefits to posterity.”