UPDATE: Nestle May Resume Palm Oil Purchases From SMART
17 May 2010 - 8:30PM
Dow Jones News
Nestle S.A. (NSRGY), the world's largest food and beverage
company by sales, may resume purchases of palm oil from Indonesia's
PT Sinar Mas Agro Resources & Technology (SMAR.JK) if
deforestation claims made by an environmental group against the
company are proven to be false, a Nestle executive said Monday.
Nestle is a major consumer of palm oil, so reopening the door to
buying from PT SMART would give the Indonesian company a major
fillip after the high-profile, costly recent losses of two of its
major sales contracts, and would grant a significant boost to the
palm oil industry, which has long taken fire for alleged
environmental wrongdoing.
Nestle stopped buying palm oil from PT SMART earlier this year
after environmental group Greenpeace alleged in a report that the
company and its parent, Singapore-listed Golden Agri-Resources Ltd.
(E5H.SG), failed to comply with plantation practices mandated by
the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil. PT SMART and Golden Agri
are both members of the RSPO, a group formed in 2004 by
stakeholders, including environmental and consumer groups and palm
oil companies, to improve the sustainability of palm oil production
through efforts such as rainforest and wildlife conservation.
PT SMART has denied a Greenpeace claim that it was also involved
in clearing rainforests and draining peatlands for palm oil
cultivation.
Other environmental groups have also placed pressure on
consumer-goods companies that source palm oil from PT SMART,
prompting fellow consumer-goods maker Unilever PLC (UL) to cancel
purchases from the company last year and, subsequently, Nestle.
SMART has appointed Control Union Certification and the BSI
Group to conduct and independent audit into Greenpeace's
allegations, the results of which will be known in June, the
company has said.
"If Sinar Mas, or anybody else, does a proper job on quality,
traceability, on having a transparent supply chain, of course we
will buy from them," Nestle executive vice president for operations
Jose Lopez said at a forum on sustainable palm oil in Malaysia.
"I don't have anything against them," he said. Once the audit is
completed, "we will take the right decision at that time."
Indonesia and Malaysia are the world's top palm oil producers,
accounting for a combined 85% of global production. Nestle's
tougher stance on sustainability in palm oil production came after
a series of environmental issues and supply suspensions hit the
palm oil industry.
Lopez reiterated that Nestle, which uses palm oil in its cereal
and instant noodle products, has pledged to source palm oil
exclusively from certified, sustainable sources by 2015. For 2010,
about 18% of its annual requirement of 320,000 tons of palm oil
will be sourced from planters who are members of the RSPO, Lopez
said. Nestle uses the palm oil--equivalent to about 0.7% of total
world production each year--in products ranging from food to
personal hygiene supplies.
"We expect (palm oil purchased by certified palm growers) to
reach 50% of purchases by end-2011," he said.
Nestle also announced that it has entered a partnership with
non-profit organization The Forest Trust, that will trace whether
its palm oil suppliers are linked to deforestation, and provide
technical support for palm-oil growers who are keen to commit to
environmental standards.
-By Shie-Lynn Lim, Dow Jones Newswires; +603 2026 1233;
shie-lynn.lim@dowjones.com