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Christopher Crank
Christopher Crank

Buy Palm Oil ^HOT^


As well as being versatile, compared to other vegetable oils the oil palm is a very efficient crop, able to produce high quantities of oil over small areas of land, almost all year round. This makes it an attractive crop for growers and smallholders, who can rely on the steady income that palm oil provides.




buy palm oil



It is important that the palm oil industry continues to invest in and grow support for and smallholder programmes and sustainable landscape initiatives. WWF is also working with governments in both palm oil using and palm oil producing countries to make sure that national laws are in place to ensure that any palm oil traded is free of deforestation, conversion and exploitation.


Royal Palm Oil contains Tocols, powerful natural antioxidants and therefore resistant to rancidity. It is shelf-stable with a high melting point therefore needs no hydrogenation and therefore no trans-fatty acid while resistant to oxidation. Royal Palm Oil has a very high smoke point at about 425 degrees F., making it an excellent oil for frying. However, the longer you use high heat, the more you will destroy the natural antioxidants. Studies have shown that about 70% of the carotenes are retained after one deep-frying, but after four deep-fries there will be virtually no carotenes left. While the mass-produced oil works well for soap making, cosmetic and industrial purposes, those who know the real thing will not cook with it unless there is no alternative. Finding the real thing in the US and Europe proved futile to the founders of Royal palm. This prompted us to procure our oil from villages across West Africa where the Oil Palm tree grows naturally in the tropical rain forest as opposed to large habitat destructive plantations with GMO trees and chemical extraction processes. This arrangement between Royal Palm and village producers not only saves the environment, But It also brings a 100% nutrient-rich cooking oil to the rest of the world while creating gainful employment for African villagers. When you purchase Royal Palm Oil, you are protecting wildlife habitats, supporting the environment and employing African village producers not large corporate interests with large plantations and huge industrial complexes.


Palm oil is an all natural oil extracted from the fruit of the African palm (elaeis guineensis) and has become a raw material used globally in the production of soap, and many products used in personal care and cosmetics.


Our palm oil, also known as a Palm oil RBD, is sourced only through suppliers that are members of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), an organization supporting sustainable palm oil production. Their website is here RSPO.org


Palm oil grows in tropical rainforests, and the uncontrolled clearing of these forests for conventional palm oil plantations has led to widespread loss of these irreplaceable and biodiverse-rich forests. Plantations have also been connected to the destruction of habitat of endangered species, including orangutans, tigers, elephants, and rhinos.


But you don't have to give up products containing palm oil! Avoiding palm oil could have worse effects because it might take support away from companies that are trying hard to improve the situation. This could encourage companies to use other products that may have even more impact on the environment. Palm oil is by far the most efficient vegetable oil to grow as it takes less land to produce than other vegetable oils. Palm oil can be produced in a responsible manner that respects the environment and the communities where it is commonly grown.


Look for the RSPO label to ensure you purchase products made with certified sustainable palm oil. This label gives you the confidence that the palm oil was produced in a socially and environmentally responsible way.


We use palm oil as an ingredient in a number of Nestlé products. To address sustainability challenges in our palm oil supply chains, we start by understanding where the palm oil comes from and how it is produced. We buy from processing companies that source palm oil in Malaysia, Indonesia, Latin America and West Africa. And we work with expert organizations and the industry to continually improve environmental and social practices.


We remain committed to sourcing 100% Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) certified supplies, even if there is a large market supply shortage on RSPO -certified palm kernel oil. We are working with industry bodies to demonstrate, regardless of this market situation, our commitment to achieving 100% certified sustainable palm oil sourced by 2023.


Working towards deforestation-free supply chains is the foundation of our Forest Positive strategy - which aims to target a positive impact on our broader sourcing landscapes. This will contribute to delivering our Net Zero Roadmap (pdf, 8Mb). Of all our key ingredients, our palm oil supply chain presents the greatest opportunity to improve its sustainable credentials, with 95.6% of our volumes assessed as deforestation-free in 2022.


Our palm oil team has mapped sourcing regions with the greatest land rights risks against volumes of palm oil sourced from those regions. This will improve our understanding of land rights risks. The results are being used to develop a strategy for identifying landscape-level projects that Nestlé can support and/or participate in and can be duplicated for other raw materials.


We partnered with Airbus and Earthworm Foundation to implement Starling, a satellite-based service to monitor 100% of our global palm oil supply chains. Starling provides highly detailed optical and radar images of land across huge areas. We monitor over 9000 farm boundaries, as well as the area surrounding more than 1700 mills, to determine whether origins are verifiably deforestation-free and whether further supplier engagement and investigation are needed.


In addition to addressing deforestation risks, we also support the conservation and restoration of forests and other important ecosystems. In 2021, we scaled up our investment for conservation and restoration around our palm oil supply chain. These initiatives embrace new models of conservation financing, collaboration, and action to drive positive impacts for people, climate and nature.


In 2020, Nestlé Malaysia announced a commitment to plant three million trees over the next three years under Project RELeaf, a reforestation initiative in palm oil producing landscapes in Sabah and Peninsular Malaysia. The focus will be to restore riparian zones and forest ecosystems. The aim is to contribute to establishing wildlife corridors and mitigating human-animal conflict, and to protect critical water supplies. Planting is being accelerated after delays due to COVID-19 movement restrictions.


Of the palm oil we source, 96% is traceable to the mill. However, assessing and monitoring conditions on the ground requires us to go further upstream, which is why we are also focusing on increasing traceability to individual plantation. In 2021, we achieved 68% of traceability to plantation. To hold our suppliers and ourselves accountable and drive industry-wide transparency, we have published a list of our Tier 1 palm oil suppliers, (pdf, 4Mb), their country of origin and the mills in our supply chain.


Nestlé has been working for many years to prevent and remediate human rights violations in its palm oil supply chain and has gained a much better understanding about the root causes of the problem. As part of our palm oil labor action plan, (pdf, 400Kb), Nestlé developed a framework to help prioritize supplier engagement and systematically take action based on suppliers' risk profile and their capacity to address labor rights issues. Under the framework, we are working with external partners to develop corrective action plans for suppliers and put monitoring systems in place to track against a set of key performance indicators.


In 2018, we partnered with our supplier, Sime Darby Plantation, to create a helpline for palm oil workers in Malaysia to report human and labor rights abuses. This third-party worker support line enables workers to safely report on working conditions, recruitment, safety and other rights abuses. Helpline coverage was extended in 2021 to cover all Sime Darby Plantations operations, or about 35 000 workers. More than 4500 workers have participated in in-person training, and many more have received informational posters, videos, and other forms of outreach.


Nestlé has supported several key initiatives to promote responsible recruitment, including funding the development of a human rights-based due diligence tool that supports palm oil producers in establishing transparency in their recruitment practices and identifying risks. A performance matrix allows suppliers to track and measure progress in their recruitment practices.


The presence of children on plantations is a risk in some parts of our palm oil supply chains. Thousands of children may live on palm oil plantations, often undocumented and without access to basic services such as education and schooling. Working with Earthworm, a Child Risk Assessment Framework has been developed to support palm grower companies. The Framework covers topics such as education, childcare, maternity protection, healthcare, nutrition, birth registration and child sexual exploitation prevention. A training model on the use of the Framework has also been developed and rolled out.


To address key challenges in our palm oil supply chains, we cannot work alone. We collaborate with various industry partners to develop action plans, define milestones, and achieve lasting change. In East Kalimantan, Indonesia, we support Earthworm in its multi-stakeholder engagements with the government and suppliers on two themes: children on plantations and fair employment for casual workers. These consultations included a workshop for 54 representatives from palm oil companies, the government, civil society organizations and labor unions. 041b061a72


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