Michael Taylor

Indonesia’s ambitious biodiesel programme will increase the risks of deforestation as more tropical forest could be cleared to grow palm oil, environmentalists have warned, urging policymakers to implement a long-term ban on new plantations.

Indonesia - which is home to the world’s third-largest tropical forests but is also its biggest producer of palm oil - has steadily increased the portion in its biodiesel mandate derived from palm oil since 2018 to boost demand.

Looking to also curb costly fuel imports and its planet-heating emissions, the Southeast Asian country raised the “bio” content in its biodiesel to 30% in late 2019 from 20% the year before, with the rest being fossil fuel.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo has targeted biodiesel made entirely out of palm oil, but without setting a firm deadline to roll it out widely, as it would require engines to be modified.

State energy company PT Pertamina last month started trials on the so-called “green diesel” after conducting tests with jet fuel late last year.

Yuyun Harmono, climate justice campaign manager at the Indonesian Forum for the Environment (WALHI), said no additional land would be used to produce palm oil for biodiesel yet - but that could change in the future, threatening forests further.

“If there is increasing demand for fuel, there will also be an increase in demand for biofuel ... of course there is a (deforestation) risk,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Indonesia was named as one of the top three countries for rainforest loss in 2019, according to Global Forest Watch, a monitoring service that uses satellite data.

Palm oil - used widely in cosmetics, food products and biofuel around the world - has faced scrutiny from green activists and consumers, who have blamed its production for forest loss, fires and worker exploitation.

In response, the industry’s watchdog, the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil, tightened its rules in late 2018, imposing a ban on clearing forests or converting peatland for oil palm plantations.

WALHI’s Harmono said biodiesel should not be viewed as a substitute for fossil-fuel oil and the use of both must fall, echoing comments by green groups last month which urged Jakarta to be more ambitious in its efforts to cut carbon emissions.

Harmono noted that, since 2018, biodiesel is mandatory to power both privately owned and business vehicles.

“It is only 30% (bio-portion) now but when demand increases, then demand for palm oil is also going to increase,” he added.

Indonesia’s biodiesel production last year used just over 7 million tonnes of palm oil - out of total national output of 41.4 million tonnes - up from about 1.4 million in 2015, according to consultancy LMC International.

Malaysia, the world’s second biggest grower, used about 880,000 tonnes of palm oil for biodiesel production in 2020, up from 600,000 in 2015.

“Indonesia has achieved very impressive growth in biodiesel production over the past five years,” said Julian McGill, head of Southeast Asia at LMC International.

“Indonesia’s success at sustaining biodiesel production has been a critical factor in the low stocks and high prices which the industry is enjoying today.”

But a slump in crude oil prices as the coronavirus pandemic hit demand has made Indonesia’s biodiesel programme less economical, while plans to boost the bio-portion to 40% have been delayed.—Reuters