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The world’s largest palm oil company has unveiled a plan to cut deforestation

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  • 06 Oct 2018
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Wilmar Aims forDeforestation-free Supply Chain by 2020 After Protests

Wilmar International, the world’s largest palm oil trader, has launched a new plan to weed out rainforest destruction and labour abuses from thousands of suppliers the week after environmental activists protested on its refineries in Indonesia. The Singapore-based company announced on Friday that it aims to have a no deforestation, no peat, no exploitation (NDPE) supply chain by 2020. But non-government group Greenpeace, which protested against Wilmar last week by scaling a refinery and oil transport vessels in Sulawesi, said the company’s policy does not go far enough and lacks key commitments needed to ensure its suppliers are not clearing rainforests. Wilmar launched a NDPE policy in 2013 after pressure from green groups, and became the first palm oil company to publish the names and locations of suppliers in 2015 in a bid to bring more transparency to a notoriously complex business. The company’s new plan, which it has described as “ambitious”, was developed with agribusiness consultancy The Forest Trust, whose chief executive Bastien Sachet said in a statement that “a tough road lies ahead” to achieve the commitments. Wilmar said it would pursue the plan is three ways—use satellite technology and independent verifiers to monitor land use change in its own concessions and those of its suppliers, launch a platform for assessing areas of forest vulnerable to clearing, and review how it tackles labour and community issues. 2020 is also that year that consumer goods giants such as Unilever, Mars and Nestlé, which buy a big share of the world’s palm oil from the likes of Wilmar, have pledged to be deforestation free.

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