Title: Prospects for world
1Prospects for world supply demand
of vegetable oils - global challenges and
implications for theoil palm agro-industry
Peter Thoenes
Trade and Markets Division Food
and Agriculture Organization of the U.N.
2 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- Overview
- Medium-term outlook for the global oilcrop market
- Global food demand, food security, resource
issues and climate change - The case of oil palm
- Emerging recommendations
2
3 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- Medium-term outlook for the global oilcrop market
- Price projections
- Supply projections
- Demand projections (incl. biofuel)
- Trade Projections
- Sources of uncertainty
- model-based projections generated by OECD-FAO
- entire agricultural sector, including biofuel
- only four main oilcrops products covered
- 10-year horizon 2009-2018
- focus on vegoils ... palm oil
3
4 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- a) Price projections for oilseeds, oils, meals
- overall
- - above historical averages
- continuing demand expansion, food and non-food
- below average s-t-u ratios for oilseeds and
products - in nominal terms
- - below 2007/08 peaks
- - exceeding 1997-2006 average
oilseeds 45 - vegoils 70
- meals 30
- - annual growth rates 1-2
- - likelihood of continued price volatility
-
4
5 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- palm oil remains the lowest-priced oil
- in real terms
- - stable (as opposed to historical
- downward trend!)
- - above 1997-2006 average
- vegoils 30 (outstanding!)
5
6 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- crude oil price assumption
- moderate rise to USD 70 in 2018
- (60 above 1997-2006 average)
- b) Supply projections (oilseeds, vegoils)
- further increase in global output (2018 over
2006-08 avg.) - oilseeds 32, vegoils 44
- exceeding other crop sectors
- concentrated in developing countries
- but general reduction in annual growth rates
(compared to past 10 years) - limited yield improvements
- slower area expansion, esp. in developing (e.g.
Lat.America)
6
7 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- EU vegoil production continues to expand 26
(from domestic and imported seed) - palm oil
- fastest expanding vegoil (ahead of soy oil)
- driven by food and industrial demand
- main factor in Indonesia area in Malaysia
yield - share in total vegoil output grows to 30
- c) Demand projections for vegoils
- further expansion 44
- commodity group with fastest growing consumption
3 p.a. - but growth slowdown
- reduced population growth saturation effects
- firm prices
- developing countries contribute most (esp. in
Asia) - population growth, income growth, low per caput
consumption level - largest expansion palm oil, followed by soyoil
- EU and China account for 28 and 16 of global
expansion
7
8 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- Biodiesel demand
- BD production
- demand strongly driven by national utilization
mandates plus subsidies - commercial viability not secured
- global BD production to more than double
127 (2009-2018) - expansion in transport fuel
- rising share of diesel in transp. fuel
- shares of BD in total transport fuel
- to remain modest
- few important players
8
9 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- vegoils as feedstock
- global vegoil use for BD to almost double
- from 16 (2009) to 31 mmt (2018)
- weight of BD demand in total vegoil consumption
- to range (in 2018) between 18 and 95
- main producers avg. rises from 11 in 2006-08 to
20 in 2018
9
10 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- Malaysia Indonesia (palm oil)
- slow development of emerging BD industry
- BD industry to absorb less than 4 of palm oil
output - low national consumption targets
- increasing palm oil price (relative to BD and
crude oil prices) - poor export prospects (increased competition,
sustainability requirements) - weight of palm oil among BD feedstock to remain
about unchanged - ca. 11 of total vegoil BD-use
- ca. 9 of all BD produced
- BD price
- to grow steadily
- remaining well above fossil diesel prices
-
10
11 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- BD trade
- expected to double (6.7 mill litres in 2018)
- 5 main players EU, Argentina, Malaysia,
Indonesia, USA - share of BD trade in total BD production to fall
slightly - (import demand increase less rapidly than
production) - domestic policies, trade barriers, lack of
harmonized biofuel specifications
11
12 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- d) Trade projections (major vegoils)
- 50 expansion
- production in main comsumption regions not
keeping up with demand - fastest growing commodity
- BF production triggers additional import demand
- lead of developing countries
- continued expansion in South-South trade
- palm oil remains most traded vegoil
- Export market
- 3 countries to supply 75 Indonesia, Malaysia,
Argentina - Indonesia Malaysia (palm oil)
- 4-5 annual growth
- 80-90 of domestic production exported
- Argentina Brazil (soy oil)
- moderate growth
- other sources of growth Canada, USA, CIS nations
12
13 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- Import market
- developing countries to lead global imports (esp.
China, India, other Asia) - but EU also contributes to expansion
- EU imports to more than double (BD production)
- esp. palm oil imports for food industry
- to become biggest importer ahead of China
- gt50 of domestic vegoil consumption to stem from
imports - strong import dependence in several countries
- global market instability
13
14 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- e) Sources of uncertainty
-
- resumption of global economic growth 2010 or
later? - policy responses to global price volatility
- high market concentration increases market
instability - continued consumer concerns about environmental
risks as well as GM products - exposure to developments in the energy market
- higher crude oil prices
- lower crop production (via rising production
costs) - reduce food consumption (via higher crop prices)
- increase BD production
- land reallocations triggered by food/fuel
competition
14
15 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- 2. Global food demand, food security, resource
issues and climate change - a) Food security
- b) Global food demand, resource issues, climate
change -
15
16 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- a) Food security
- good medium- and longer-term market prospects
- stable/slightly rising commodity prices
- demand growth matched by production increase
- developing nations participating in expansion of
production, consumption and trade - deterioration in world hunger and food security
- rise in number of people living below the hunger
threshold - rising food prices
- contributing factors
- temporary supply and demand imbalances
- increased market instability
- national interventions in markets
- direct linkage energy food prices
- food/fuel competition
- falling international investment flows
- budgetary pressure on development aid
- global economic slowdown
16
17 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- b) Global food demand, resource issues, climate
change - Long-term food requirements
- further rise in avg. per caput consumption (in
kcal/person/day) - oilcrop products remain major contributors to
future growth in developing country food
consumption - Sources of production growth
- 80 from higher land productivity yield
cropping intensity - 20 from area expansion
- Productivity
- developing country yield levels continue growing,
but growth rates may fall!
17
18 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- Land availability
- significant amount of land potentially suitable
for soybeans and oil palm -
18
19 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- actual land availability is limited
- competition among food crops, pasture uses, wood
uses and other, new uses (energy crops, crops
with low carbon footprint) - growing urban, industrial, infrastructural uses
- only part of the land has high or at least good
yield potential - considerable part of land consists of forest -
conversion carries significant social/environmenta
l costs - Climate change
- no consensus on ultimate net global impact on
agric. production - global warming and changing rainfall patterns
potentially - beneficial in high latitude regions
- damaging in low latitude tropical areas
- uncertainty regarding the effects of higher
atmospheric CO2 concentration (carbon
fertilization) - consensus
- food security to be affected
- considerable scope to improve resilience via
adaptation - until 2050 increased risk of water stress
rising incidence of extreme weather events - after 2050 significant impact on agr
productivity (shifts in production frontiers)
and on the global food system
19
20 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- 3. The case of oil palm
- a) Growth factors productivity and area
- b) Area expansion issues
- c) Productivity improvement
- d) Socio-economic dimension
- e) Palm oil as BD feedstock
20
21 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- a) Growth factors productivity and area
- past growth
- strongly based on area expansion
- of which 50-60 forest conversion
- recent trend
- less primary forest conversion
- more conversion of cultivated land
- (rubber, degraded land, secondary forests)
- yield levels
- only minor improvements
- but considerable yield gaps
-
21
22 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- b) Area expansion issues
- limited actual potential - except on forest land
- environmental costs associated with
deforestation/other land conversion - 1.) carbon balance
- net carbon balance calculations pose problems
- oil palm carbon balance turns positive after
- ca. 80 years primary forest conversion
- ca. 600 years peatland conversion (high carbon
stock) - ca. 10 years previously deforested, degraded,
idle land - (comparison soybean Brazil forest 300 years,
grassland 37 years)
22
23 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- 2.) reduction in biodiversity
- highest in forest conversion
- some improvement when degraded land is reclaimed
- 3.) additional problems associated with
deforestation - land fragmentation
- loss of forest habitats
- land clearing through fire (traditional method,
cost effective, common among smallholders) - c) Productivity improvement
- 1.) improved management practices
- esp. in smallholder oil palm cultivation (closing
the yield gap) - typically using less productive land
- limited access to capital and labour
- limited access to technical/managerial know-how
23
24 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
-
- 2.) improved planting material
- smallholder access (closing yield gap)
- traditional selection and breeding methods
- 19-year selection cycle
- limited supplies of improved material
- genetic modification
- 2008 breakthrough sequencing of oil palm genome
- much shorter selection cycle
- risk GM opposition by end-consumers
- d) Socio-economic aspects
- important benefits
- employment and income generation
- improved access to health care, education and
other social services - attractive for smallholders (good return-to-input
ratio) - dangers associated with deforestation
- erosion of traditional culture, income sources,
self-sufficiency
24
25 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- e) Palm oil as BD feedstock
- lowest-priced feedstock with good energy
efficiency - competition from vegoils that enjoy direct policy
support - all vegoil feedstock (as well as ethanol
feedstock) achieve limited net carbon savings
compared to fossil fuels - esp. when counting direct/indirect land use
changes - all food-crop based BF production affects food
supply and food prices - rising market instability
- negative repercussions on food security
- investment uncertainties
- further changes in policy interventions
- (food security, environmental budgetary
considerations, standards) - future crude oil-vegoil price ratio
- advent of (replacement by) 2nd generation
feedstock technologies
25
26 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- 4. Emerging recommendations
- a) National priorities
- oil palm cultivation
- minimize conversion of primary forests
- encourage use of idle, degraded and other
marginal land - promote best management practices in production
processing - sustainable yield improvement
- reduced land degradation, pollution etc.
- biodiversity preservation , cover crops, IPM etc.
- support smallholder involvement
- improve access to high-yielding varieties
- promote improved plantation management
- encourage establishment of smallholder
cooperatives - retain diversification
- promote development of small-scale mills
- secure funding for RD and infrastructural works
- enforce (and monitor adherence to) regulations
26
27 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- Palm oil-based biodiesel production
- favour production on land not suitable for food
production - allow gradual expansion of BF industry put in
place entire commodity chain - provide appropriate regulatory framework
- favour production for domestic market
- general support to rural development and overall
economic growth - meeting fuel needs in areas where feedstock is
grown, esp. less accessible areas - production for export offers limited scope
- main consumers rely on domestic sources (except
EU) - various barriers to trade remain (lack of
harmonized specifications, sustainability
certification, tariff protection)
27
28 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- a) International priorities
- Food security
- coordinate national policies and market
interventions to reduce food security risks - encourage establishment of social safety net
schemes - accelerate multilateral trade liberalization
- Biofuel sector
- improve policy planning and coordination
- harmonization of trade regulations,
sustainability standards - promote transition to 2nd generation technologies
and feedstock - Climate change
- coordinate national policies
- foster analysis of impact on global agric. food
systems - coordinate research investment into adaptation
measures
28
29 Oilcrops market outlook and
oil palm challenges
- Oil palm
- promote schemes that reward reduced deforestation
and forest degradation - (e.g. REDD) and other control measures
- support voluntary, private sector initiatives on
standards for sustainable production and
processing (e.g. RSPO) - application is demanding and costly economic
return is uncertain - adaptation to smallholder environment needed
- supporting legal/policy reforms required at
national level - coordinate investment into agric. RD
(productivity enhancement) and facilitate
technology transfer
29