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Supply Chain Risk

‘Mutual recognition’: Indonesia calls on UK to adopt same standards for rapeseed as it wants for palm oil

The proposed Due Diligence​ policy would make it compulsory for palm oil importers in the UK declare whether their imports have negative environmental impacts and make them take the responsibility for these, which would increase the likelihood of them avoiding countries with poor track records – such as South East Asian countries like Indonesia.

The UK Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) invited stakeholders, including the Indonesian government, to participate in the consultation for this – to which Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister Mahendra Siregar has responded by writing to British Ambassador to Jakarta Owen Jenkins asking for more in-depth discussion before even talking about the Due Diligence framework.

“I believe mutual respect and mutual benefit [for the UK and Indonesia] would be best achieved through mutual recognition of each other’s regulatory framework regarding sustainable supply chains – This is not just about Indonesian efforts at sustainability but also similar efforts made by the UK government,”​ Siregar wrote in the letter, which FoodNavigator-Asia​ has viewed.

“This mutual recognition could then lay the grounds for [preapproval] at origin to ensure that relevant products meet the legal requirements in each other’s countries and be freely imported and marketed without undue restrictions.

“Indonesia would [also] expect similar efforts [such as this Due Diligence policy] to be made by the UK on rapeseed cultivation, upon which mutual recognition could be based.”

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