When thinking about palm oil at a small local scale, there are many viable alternatives.
While policing on sustainable palm oil is extremely important, I always try to see the bigger picture.
So, thinking on a worldwide scale, I ask myself, can we switch to a crop that causes lesser problems?
The answer, right now, is No.
Palm oil has the highest yield / acre of any other mass produced oil crop.
We are talking about 3.5x the yield of coconut oil, or almost 7x the yield of soybean oil.
That is, if we wanted to cut out completely palm oil production, we would have to free up 7x more landmass for soy cultivation. Or 3.5x for coconut production. This does not take into account that both coconut and soybean are "cooking oil", while palm oil is mainly a "biofuel oil". This inevitably will cause a shift in prices for food oils, where developing nations will have to pay more for their source of calories, on a long term scale it would be like a dramatic increase in the price of rice (the most consumed source of carbs).
A further reasoning is that soybean oil cannot be cultivated in the tropics, hence, the problem will be transported elsewhere (US, for example), magnified, and leaving other countries without a centuries-long established industry.
So, besides pushing the issue on policing sustainable palm cultivation, boycotting and ranting about the oil palm cultivation is actually the least environmentally-friendly thing somebody could do.
As of now.
In 50 years, maybe, we will switch all of our oil production to algal ponds, with a yield far higher than palm oil, and so there will not be the need to discuss which oil is good or bad.
While policing on sustainable palm oil is extremely important, I always try to see the bigger picture.
So, thinking on a worldwide scale, I ask myself, can we switch to a crop that causes lesser problems?
The answer, right now, is No.
Palm oil has the highest yield / acre of any other mass produced oil crop.
We are talking about 3.5x the yield of coconut oil, or almost 7x the yield of soybean oil.
That is, if we wanted to cut out completely palm oil production, we would have to free up 7x more landmass for soy cultivation. Or 3.5x for coconut production. This does not take into account that both coconut and soybean are "cooking oil", while palm oil is mainly a "biofuel oil". This inevitably will cause a shift in prices for food oils, where developing nations will have to pay more for their source of calories, on a long term scale it would be like a dramatic increase in the price of rice (the most consumed source of carbs).
A further reasoning is that soybean oil cannot be cultivated in the tropics, hence, the problem will be transported elsewhere (US, for example), magnified, and leaving other countries without a centuries-long established industry.
So, besides pushing the issue on policing sustainable palm cultivation, boycotting and ranting about the oil palm cultivation is actually the least environmentally-friendly thing somebody could do.
As of now.
In 50 years, maybe, we will switch all of our oil production to algal ponds, with a yield far higher than palm oil, and so there will not be the need to discuss which oil is good or bad.