Central and West African countries have
promised to protect their tropical forests from being cut down to make way for
palm oil crops, in a declaration signed on Wednesday by governments
representing more than 70 percent of Africa's tropical forests.
Palm
oil, one of the world's most widely used vegetable oils, is a fast-growing
business and a major cause of tropical deforestation worldwide.
The
seven countries that signed the declaration in Marrakesh, where international
climate talks are taking place, want to expand into the $50 billion global palm
oil market.
The
countries, however, also are home to about 13 percent of the world's remaining
tropical forest, particularly in the Congo Basin region.
Those
are at risk as the palm oil market expands, toward an estimated $88 billion a
year by 2022, according to the World Economic Forum.
"It's
really exciting and important that these countries which are about to expand
into the market have learned from the path that (Malaysia and Indonesia)
took," Dominic Waughray, head of public-private partnerships at the World
Economic Forum, said in a telephone interview.
Indonesia
and Malaysia export about 85 percent of the world's palm oil. Malaysia has
already cleared much of its forests to grow the crop, and Indonesia is in the
process of doing so, Waughray told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
The
World Economic Forum hosts the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020, a partnership of
governments, companies and non-governmental organisations, which produced the
Marrakesh Declaration.
About
half of global tropical deforestation is driven by beef, soy, palm, and paper
and pulp. But palm oil is probably the biggest driver of the four commodities,
Waughray said.
It
is used in a host of everyday goods, from soap to breakfast cereals, as well as
for frying and fuel.
PRESSURE
FROM BUYERS
Some
of the pressure on governments to protect forests comes from major buyers such
as Kellogg's, Unilever, and Procter & Gamble, which aim to strip
deforestation from their palm oil supply chains by 2020, Waughray said.
Paul
Polman, chief executive officer of Unilever - a major palm oil buyer - welcomed
the signing of the declaration.
"Palm
oil, if produced sustainably, can play a key role in poverty alleviation by
helping farmers thrive economically while adopting sustainable agricultural and
business practices," he said on Wednesday.
Under
the declaration, governments have also promised to protect the human rights and
livelihoods of indigenous people and smallholder farmers, and help them access
the booming market.
"Deforestation
has often been linked to human rights violations," said Hindou Oumarou
Ibrahim, co-chair of the International Indigenous People's Forum on Climate
Change.
"People
are losing access to the land they have always lived on and farmed. I hope this
declaration will be an example to the rest of the region and encourage other
tropical forest African countries to follow in the commitment," she said
in a statement.
The
seven governments are the Central African Republic, Ivory Coast, the Democratic
Republic of Congo, Ghana, Liberia, the Republic of Congo and Sierra Leone.
The
declaration "is not just about environmental sustainability, it's also
transparency in that supply chain (including) respecting and managing the
rights of indigenous peoples groups," Waughray said. Reuters
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