Euractiv.com with Reuters Est. 3min 13-01-2023 Malaysia's Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim (R) along with his deputies Ahmad Zahid Hamidi (C) and Fadillah Yusof (L) after swearing-in ceremony of the country's new cabinet at the National Palace in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 03 December 2022. [EPA-EFE/HASNOOR HUSSAIN] Euractiv is part of the Trust Project >>> Print Email Facebook X LinkedIn WhatsApp Telegram Malaysia said on Thursday (12 January) it could stop exporting palm oil to the European Union in response to a new EU law aimed at protecting forests by strictly regulating sale of the product. Commodities Minister Fadillah Yusof said Malaysia and Indonesia would discuss the law, which bans sale of palm oil and other commodities linked to deforestation unless importers can show that production of their specific goods has not damaged forests. The EU is a major palm oil importer and the law, agreed to in December, has raised an outcry from Indonesia and Malaysia, the top producers. “If we need to engage experts from overseas to counter whatever move by EU, we have to do it,” Fadillah told reporters on the sidelines of a seminar on Thursday. “Or the option could be we just stop exports to Europe, just focus on other countries if they (the EU) are giving us all a difficult time to export to them.” EU agrees new law to kick deforestation out of supply chains EU legislators reached an agreement in the early hours of Tuesday (6 December) to pass a new law guaranteeing that products sold in the EU are not linked to the destruction or degradation of forests. EU says it is not banning palm oil Environmental activists blame the palm oil industry for rampant clearing of Southeast Asian rainforests, though Indonesia and Malaysia have created sustainability certification standards mandatory for all plantations. Fadillah, who is also deputy prime minister, urged the members of the Council of Palm Oil Producing Countries (CPOPC) to work together against the new law and to combat “baseless allegations” made by the EU and United States about the sustainability of palm oil. CPOPC, which is led by Indonesia and Malaysia, has previously accused the EU of unfairly targeting palm oil. Responding to Fadillah, the EU’s ambassador to Malaysia said it was not banning any imports of palm oil from the country and denied that its deforestation law created barriers to Malaysian exports. “(The law) applies equally to commodities produced in any country, including EU member states, and aims to ensure that commodity production does not drive further deforestation and forest degradation,” EU Ambassador Michalis Rokas told Reuters. Rokas added that he looked forward to meeting Fadillah to ease Malaysia’s concerns. 'Ray of hope': Activists hail EU's pioneering anti-deforestation law The European Parliament voted Tuesday (13 September) in favour of a regulation requiring companies to ensure products sold in the EU do not come from deforested or degraded land, a move hailed as a “ray of hope” by green campaigners. EU demand for palm oil was expected to decline significantly over the next 10 years even before the new law was agreed to. In 2018, an EU renewable-energy directive required the phasing out of palm-based transportation fuels by 2030 because of their perceived link to deforestation. Indonesia and Malaysia have launched separate cases with the WTO, saying the fuels measure is discriminatory and constitutes a trade barrier. Indonesian President Joko Widodo and Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim this week agreed to “fight discrimination against palm oil” and strengthen cooperation through CPOPC. The EU is the world’s third-largest palm oil consumer, according to Malaysian Palm Oil Board data. It accounts for 9.4% of palm oil exports from Malaysia, taking 1.47 million tonnes in 2022, down 10.5% from a year earlier. Palm oil to be phased out in EU by 2030 The use of palm oil as fuel should disappear in Europe by 2030 under a reform of the bloc’s renewable energy laws agreed this morning after all-night negotiations. Read more with Euractiv Local resistance, a major stumbling block for EU’s critical raw materials planThe European Union eyes a revival of its mining industry to support the green and digital transition but local resistance and lengthy permitting procedures could prove one of the main stumbling blocks to achieving this goal. Subscribe now to our newsletter EU Elections Decoded Email Address * Politics Newsletters