WWF calls on investors to step up on sustainable palm oil

Date: 
May 03, 2012

WWF is urging investors to do more to promote sustainable palm oil, backed by findings from a new survey released during a high-level meeting of investors and producers in Singapore.

 WWF’s first-of-its-kind Palm Oil Investor Review 2012 surveyed 35 key palm oil sector investors to assess how they are managing the challenges associated with sustainable palm oil and outlines the role they can play in moving the industry toward greater sustainability.

“Investors are uniquely placed to influence investee companies to adopt sustainable practices through active engagement and exercise of proxy voting rights, and through directing their investment capital towards sustainable palm oil producers, ” said WWF’s Jeanne Stampe, co-author of the report.

The review recommends that investors incorporate environment, social and governance (ESG) issues into ownership polices and engage more actively with investee companies across the supply chain to get them to make commitments to certified sustainable palm oil (CSPO). 

Investors and the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) should also develop much deeper engagement to realize mutual benefits.  In addition, investors  should pressure stock exchanges to mandate minimum reporting requirements for high impact sectors like palm oil, the WWF says.

“Understanding the dynamics at play is key to harnessing the power of investors to shape the palm oil industry. Given the strong link between sustainability and investment success, investors need to highlight to investee companies that integrating sustainability into the core strategy and operations allows them to derive business benefits, access a broader pool of capital and deliver better investment performance,” said Stampe.

More than 50 million tonnes of palm oil are used worldwide each year in everyday products including food and cosmetics. From 2010 to 2020, this volume is projected to increase by over 65 percent. The growing demand for palm oil has resulted in rapid and poorly managed expansion of production, causing deforestation, species loss, greenhouse gas emissions and social conflicts with local communities.