CORRECT (3/18): Nestle Drops Indonesia's Sinar Mas As Palm Oil Supplier
March 19 2010 - 1:57AM
Dow Jones News
Nestle (NESN.VX), the world's largest food maker, has dropped
Sinar Mas Agro Resources & Technology (SMAR.JK) as a supplier
of palm oil, after environmental group Greenpeace led protests
accusing the latter of destroying Indonesian rainforests.
However, Greenpeace said Nestle's concession doesn't go far
enough in ensuring its products are not tainted by palm oil that's
been produced as a result of forest destruction.
Nestle has replaced Sinar Mas with an unidentified supplier, the
company said in a statement released Thursday. The company said it
bought palm oil from Sinar Mas only for manufacturing in Indonesia,
and no palm oil bought from Sinar Mas has been used for
manufacturing in other countries.
Another food giant, Unilever NV (UN), dropped Sinar Mas as one
of its palm oil suppliers three months ago.
Greenpeace on Wednesday published a report accusing Sinar Mas of
destroying rainforests and orangutan habitats to set up its palm
oil plantations. The organization subsequently launched protests at
Nestle's headquarters and factories in the U.K., Germany and the
Netherlands.
Following Nestle's action to drop Sinar Mas, Greenpeace said
Thursday that palm oil produced by Sinar Mas would continue to flow
through Nestle's supply chain as it buys palm oil from third party
suppliers like Cargill, which Greenpeace said purchases from Sinar
Mas.
Nestle said it is "making sure that companies, such as Cargill,
understand our demands for palm oil which is not sourced from
suppliers which destroy rainforests."
Sinar Mas Agro denied that its palm oil plantations were
damaging the environment.
"We are committed to applying responsible land clearing and the
best practice of farming management in all our plantations,"
President Director Daud Dharsono said Thursday.
Dharsono did not disclose how much palm oil the company supplies
to Nestle.
Unilever, the other company that has banned purchases from Sinar
Mas, accounted for 3% of Sinar Mas' total annual palm oil sales of
$1 billion, which Dharsono in an interview in December had
characterized as "insignificant."
During that interview, Dharsono said the bulk of Sinar Mas's
customers, who are based in India and China, won't be swayed by
Unilever's actions.
Nestle said it is committed to using only "certified sustainable
palm oil" by 2015.
Of the 45 million tons of annual, global crude-palm-oil output,
only 1.5 million tons has been certified by the palm oil watchgroup
Roundtable for Sustainable Palm Oil as having been produced through
sustainable methods.
Of the 1.5 million tons, Indonesia, the world's largest CPO
producer, accounts for only 180,000 tons.
-By Fawziah Selamat, Dow Jones Newswires; +62 21 3983 1277;
fawziah.selamat@dowjones.com