RSPO delivers new standard for independent smallholders

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Webber delivers his speech during the launch of the 17th Annual Roundtable Conference on Sustainable Palm Oil and 16th Annual General Assembly, where members made a bold commitment to supporting greater inclusion of smallholders into the sustainable palm oil supply chain, through the adoption of the RSPO Independent Smallholder Standard.

BANGKOK: The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) concluded its 17th Annual Roundtable Conference on Sustainable Palm Oil (RT17) and 16th Annual General Assembly (GA16), where members made a bold commitment to supporting greater inclusion of smallholders into the sustainable palm oil supply chain, through the adoption of the RSPO Independent Smallholder (ISH) Standard.

Themed ‘ A Shared Responsibility: Converting Commitments into Action ’, the conference provided an apt platform to set in motion the recently endorsed requirements and the implementation of Shared Responsibility rules for members.

While this is not a new concept for RSPO, Shared Responsibility reinforces the Code of Conduct for members and extends the reach of the 2018 Principles and Criteria (P&C).

“Through the new rules for Shared Responsibility, I expect all members to actively participate and work together to increase the demand for sustainable palm oil with mutual accountability throughout the supply chain,” said Datuk Darrel Webber, chief executive officer of RSPO.

Dato Carl Bek-Nielsen, RSPO Co-Chair and Chief Executive Director of United Plantations Bhd added, “Finally, the rules of shared responsibility will balance the scales and the downstream players will join us on this journey – not just in promoting the production of sustainable palm oil but equally as important – the uptake of sustainable palm oil.

“I am hopeful, and see this as the cement in a brick wall, without which, the wall will crumble.”

The newly adopted RSPO ISH Standard implements simple, straightforward requirements and cost-effective tools that consider diversity, capacity, and incentives, whilst ensuring that core sustainability criteria are upheld.

Girish Deshpande, Global Surfactants Business Planner and Palm Sustainability Leader of Procter & Gamble UK, said, “This standard allows us to achieve our ambition of being a force for good and a force for growth, driving livelihood improvement for smallholders.”

RT17 also saw the launch of a new initiative, the RSPO Smallholder Trainer Academy (STA) that aims to significantly increase the resources available for smallholders globally. By adopting a ‘train-the-trainer’ approach, RSPO hopes to reach larger numbers of small scale oil palm farmers through agricultural best practice training. “We can’t leave smallholders behind.

Supporting them with training is vital to make sustainable palm oil production inclusive,” said Narno Sayoto Irontiko, Chairman of FORTASBI (Association for Smallholder Farmers).

Throughout the three-day conference, other industry-current topics were discussed including, ‘DNA and Blockchain Technology in Palm Oil Traceability’, ‘Our Shared Planet: The Human-Wildlife Conflict,’ as well as ‘The Next Decade for Palm Oil and Sustainable Palm Oil’.

The inaugural RSPO Excellence Awards – evaluated by a panel of independent judges – celebrated the efforts of RSPO members for their efforts on Conservation, Community Impact, Human and Labour Rights, Smallholders and Outstanding Achievement.