The palm oil sector in the European Union urges markets to put bias aside in light of the global vegetable oil shortages

Published Apr 26, 2022

Tridge summary

The article highlights the potential impact of the Ukraine-Russia conflict and EU sustainability regulations on the global vegetable oil market, with a focus on palm oil. It discusses the significant disruption expected in sunflower oil production, leading to a shortage and price increase in the market. Amidst this crisis, palm oil has emerged as a possible alternative, despite EU boycotts. The article criticizes Iceland's supermarket chain for its previous anti-palm oil stance and its recent decision to return to using sustainable palm oil due to supply constraints. The piece underscores the challenges of maintaining sustainability commitments in the face of supply issues and consumer expectations, questioning the sustainability of Iceland's temporary solution and calling for a consistent approach to sustainability.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

With markets such as the European Union ramping up the pressure on palm oil by pushing forth with sustainability regulatory frameworks that seemingly target the commodity, the impacts of the ongoing Ukraine-Russia war have raised questions over the feasibility of boycotting an entire commodity at a time when vegetable oil supply is at risk of falling short of global requirements. As it is, industry experts expect the crisis in Ukraine to have a significant impact on APAC countries in terms of a severe drop in vegetable oil supply​, with millions of tonnes of oil production expected to be disrupted. Sunflower oil is likely to be the biggest casualty, as Ukraine produces some 19 million tonnes of this annually, with Ukraine and Russia together making up about 70% of global crude sunflower oil exports (Ukraine usually makes up about half of the export market). Furthermore, sunflower seeds are generally sown in April and May, and harvested in September – none of which looks likely to ...

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