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    Nigeria and The world’s most controversial palm oil

    Chronicle EditorBy Chronicle EditorMarch 29, 2018No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Nigeria to create four million jobs from oil palm production
    A local palm oil producer in Nigeria where palms grow as tall as 60 feet
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    A local palm oil producer in Nigeria where palms grow as tall as 60 feet

    There’s something about Nigeria and oil. Be it crude oil, palm oil or vegetable oil, Nigeria had loads of it but somehow the most populous black nation in the world cannot make the most of it.

    That Malaysia got its first palms from Nigeria through the British is not news but what’s news is the fact that Malaysia oil industry has blossomed so well that it employ millions while the industry in Nigeria gasp for breathe.



    Here are some facts about palm oil and the debate around it:

    * Palm oil has been consumed as a foodstuff for as long as 5,000 years.

    * The oil palm tree originates from Nigeria and West Africa where it grows in the wild. Palms can grow taller than 60 feet (18.3 m).

    * Oil palms were introduced to Malaysia by the British in the early 1870s as an ornamental plant.

    READ: Malala returns to Pakistan six years after she was shot by Taliban

    * Oil palms start bearing fruit about 30 months after being planted, and are productive for the next 20 to 30 years.

    * Palm oil is used in a wide range of food and household products, from biscuits, ice-cream and chocolate spreads to soaps and cosmetics, as well as in biofuels.

    * India, China, Indonesia and Europe are the main consumers of palm oil.

    * Palm trees produce four to 10 times more oil than other vegetable oil crops per unit of cultivated land.

    * Global palm oil production was estimated to be about 65 million tonnes in 2017.

    * Indonesia and Malaysia produce about 90 percent of the world’s palm oil supplies. Other growing nations include Thailand, Ecuador, Nigeria and Ghana.

    The Niger Delta region of Nigeria is blessed with palm kernel used for palm oil

    * About 40 percent, or 5.6 million hectares, of the total area of land planted with oil palm in Indonesia and Malaysia is owned by smallholders.

    * Across Indonesia and Malaysia, 4.5 million people earn their living from palm oil production.

    * Palm oil output in the top-two producing nations was forecast to climb to new highs this year as it recovered from a 2015 El Nino weather pattern, pushing average prices for 2018 down by 7 percent from 2017 to $676.30 a tonne, according to a Reuters poll in January.

    * In some regions, the clearance of land for oil palm cultivation has caused – and continues to cause – deforestation, despite pledges by big companies to end it.

    * The palm oil industry has been blamed by activists for slash-and-burn forest clearing that causes an annual haze across parts of Southeast Asia.

    * The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) is an industry body of consumers, green groups and plantation firms that aims to promote the use of certified sustainable palm oil products, and is backed by many major European palm oil buyers.

    * Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, the Netherlands and Britain have either already met or are on track to deliver on a commitment to use 100-percent sustainable certified palm oil by 2020.

    * An estimated 60 percent of palm oil used for food in Europe in 2016 was certified sustainable palm oil.

    * Europe’s lawmakers approved draft measures earlier this year to reform the EU power market and cut energy consumption to meet more ambitious climate change goals. The plan includes a ban on the use of palm oil in motor fuels from 2021.

    * Italian confectionery firm Ferrero, which makes hazelnut and chocolate spread Nutella, has publicly defended palm oil after European authorities listed the oil as a cancer risk.

    Over the last decade, pressure from consumers and green groups has pushed big companies that produce, trade or buy palm oil to tackle labour abuses on plantations and commit to ending deforestation that is contributing to climate change.

    Yet the small farmers who grow close to half the fruit that yields the edible oil in major suppliers Malaysia and Indonesia have been largely left out of efforts to make the industry greener and more ethical, industry officials say.

    Sources: RSPO, Malaysian Palm Oil Council, The Sustainable Trade Initiative, Reuters

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