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KUALA LUMPUR (BLOOMBERG) - Malaysia, the world's second-biggest palm oil producer, has ruled out curtailing cooking oil exports as it has enough supplies to meet local demand and will instead focus on targeting subsidies to ensure it benefits the most needy consumers.
"So far, we have no worries because we definitely have no shortages at all," Plantation Industries and Commodities Minister Zuraida Kamaruddin said in an interview on Tuesday (May 24).
"Most of the time we export more than half of what we produce, and we still have an excess to export," she said from her office in the administrative capital Putrajaya.
The nation aims to fill the gap in the edible oil market caused by the Ukraine war, as well Indonesia's export curbs on palm oil, Ms Zuraida said.
She forecasts Malaysia's palm oil production may rebound to 23 million to 25 million tonnes in 2022, versus last year's 18.1 million tonnes, as pandemic-driven labour shortages ease and foreign workers are allowed back in estates, while smallholders boost productivity to capitalise on high prices.
The labour situation in local plantations will likely return to pre-pandemic levels by June as issues with foreign worker intake are being ironed out, Ms Zuraida said, setting palm oil yields on track to climb in the second half of the year.
"All the teething problems in terms of the worker application and processes" have been resolved, she said. "Everything is in place and now it's about workers coming in."
Around the world, governments are taking to food protectionism to secure local supplies and battle rising food costs, stoked in part by supply shocks caused by the war in Ukraine.
Top shipper Indonesia recently temporarily banned palm oil exports, before replacing it with domestic sales quota after farmers protested the move. India has moved to curb wheat and sugar exports, and Serbia and Kazakhstan have imposed quotas on grain shipments.
Elevated global commodity prices, which were initially expected to ease in the third quarter of the year, will likely remain high toward the year-end or even into 2023 before normalising, Ms Zuraida said. That's problematic for Malaysia, which is a net food importer and exposed to global shocks in the food supply chain.
Prime Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob on Monday announced that the country will halt exports of chickens from June, and investigate allegations of cartel pricing, as the nation seeks to secure its own supply. The move is likely to hit Singapore, which sources a third of its supply from Malaysia, as well as Thailand, Brunei, Japan and Hong Kong.
The measure will be temporary until prices and production of chicken stabilises, Agriculture and Food Industries Minister Ronald Kiandee said at the sidelines of a ministry event on Tuesday. Both Mr Kiandee and Ms Zuraida said that the government is not currently considering export restrictions on other agricultural commodities.
Malaysia typically sets aside about 30 per cent of its output annually for its local subsidy programme, and the new mechanism may be rolled out this year after it is finalised by the finance ministry, she said.
Hawkers in Malaysia feeling the heat of chicken shortage ahead of export ban
Some poultry sellers may shut stalls when chicken exports halt from Malaysia, price hike expected
Ms Zuraida added that the plan to trim export taxes on palm oil may be a temporary measure that's limited to government-linked companies with downstream operations in foreign countries, such as India and Pakistan. The move is still being discussed with the finance ministry and is expected to be ready by July, she said.
Meanwhile, the implementation of the B20 biodiesel mandate in the transport sector will be slowed to prioritise the use of palm oil in food, she said.
While palm oil prices may ease alongside the rival commodities and amid rising output, benchmark futures may stay supported up to RM4,500 (S$1,400) a ton into early next year, she said. Prices in Malaysia jumped 3.3 per cent to close at RM6,470 on Tuesday.
After halting chicken exports, Malaysia rules out cooking oil curbs
KUALA LUMPUR (BLOOMBERG) - Malaysia, the world's second-biggest palm oil producer, has ruled out curtailing cooking oil exports as it has enough supplies to meet local demand and will instead focus on targeting subsidies to ensure it benefits the most needy consumers.
"So far, we have no worries because we definitely have no shortages at all," Plantation Industries and Commodities Minister Zuraida Kamaruddin said in an interview on Tuesday (May 24).
"Most of the time we export more than half of what we produce, and we still have an excess to export," she said from her office in the administrative capital Putrajaya.
The nation aims to fill the gap in the edible oil market caused by the Ukraine war, as well Indonesia's export curbs on palm oil, Ms Zuraida said.
She forecasts Malaysia's palm oil production may rebound to 23 million to 25 million tonnes in 2022, versus last year's 18.1 million tonnes, as pandemic-driven labour shortages ease and foreign workers are allowed back in estates, while smallholders boost productivity to capitalise on high prices.
The labour situation in local plantations will likely return to pre-pandemic levels by June as issues with foreign worker intake are being ironed out, Ms Zuraida said, setting palm oil yields on track to climb in the second half of the year.
"All the teething problems in terms of the worker application and processes" have been resolved, she said. "Everything is in place and now it's about workers coming in."
Around the world, governments are taking to food protectionism to secure local supplies and battle rising food costs, stoked in part by supply shocks caused by the war in Ukraine.
Top shipper Indonesia recently temporarily banned palm oil exports, before replacing it with domestic sales quota after farmers protested the move. India has moved to curb wheat and sugar exports, and Serbia and Kazakhstan have imposed quotas on grain shipments.
Elevated global commodity prices, which were initially expected to ease in the third quarter of the year, will likely remain high toward the year-end or even into 2023 before normalising, Ms Zuraida said. That's problematic for Malaysia, which is a net food importer and exposed to global shocks in the food supply chain.
Prime Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob on Monday announced that the country will halt exports of chickens from June, and investigate allegations of cartel pricing, as the nation seeks to secure its own supply. The move is likely to hit Singapore, which sources a third of its supply from Malaysia, as well as Thailand, Brunei, Japan and Hong Kong.
The measure will be temporary until prices and production of chicken stabilises, Agriculture and Food Industries Minister Ronald Kiandee said at the sidelines of a ministry event on Tuesday. Both Mr Kiandee and Ms Zuraida said that the government is not currently considering export restrictions on other agricultural commodities.
Subsidies
The government is in the midst of targeting cooking oil subsidies toward lower income groups and small businesses, Ms Zuraida said.Malaysia typically sets aside about 30 per cent of its output annually for its local subsidy programme, and the new mechanism may be rolled out this year after it is finalised by the finance ministry, she said.
Hawkers in Malaysia feeling the heat of chicken shortage ahead of export ban
Some poultry sellers may shut stalls when chicken exports halt from Malaysia, price hike expected
Ms Zuraida added that the plan to trim export taxes on palm oil may be a temporary measure that's limited to government-linked companies with downstream operations in foreign countries, such as India and Pakistan. The move is still being discussed with the finance ministry and is expected to be ready by July, she said.
Meanwhile, the implementation of the B20 biodiesel mandate in the transport sector will be slowed to prioritise the use of palm oil in food, she said.
While palm oil prices may ease alongside the rival commodities and amid rising output, benchmark futures may stay supported up to RM4,500 (S$1,400) a ton into early next year, she said. Prices in Malaysia jumped 3.3 per cent to close at RM6,470 on Tuesday.