Palm oil is an important and versatile oil which is used as a raw material for both food and non food industries.
composition
palm oil, like all fats, is composed of fatty acids, esterified with glycerol. palm oil has an especially high concentration of saturated fat, specially, of the 16-carbon chain saturated fatty acid palmatic acid, to which it gives it name. monosatuated oleic acid is also a major constituent of palm oil. un refined palm is also a significant source of tocotrienol,part of the vitamin E family.
Efficiency
Harvested all year round, oil palm tree produce in avarage 10 tonnes of fruits per hactter far morfe then soya bean, seeed and sunflower crops. palm oil impects The areas being cleard for palm oil are particularly rich in carbon. Indoneshia forest store even more carbon per hectare then brazilian amazon thanks to their carbon-rich soil; palm cultivation there was responsible for 2% to 9% of worldwide emission from tropical land use between 2000 and 2010. In malaysia,the carbon stock of tropical forest can range up to 99 million kilograms of carbon per square mile. Thats equivalent to the emissions from driving an avarage car from new york to San francisco and back 76 times. one huge source of global warming emossions associated with palm oil is the draining and burning of the carbon-rich swamps known as peatlands. peatlands can hold up to 18 to 28 times as much as carbon as the forest above them ; when they are drained and buried , both the carbon methane are released into the atmosphere and unless the water tables is restored, peatlands continue to decay and release gobal warming emission for decades. as if there was not bad enough, the burning of the peatlands releases a dangerous haze into the air, resulting in severe health impacts and significants economic losses. Each year, more then 100.000 deaths in southeast Asia can be attributed to particulate matter exposure from landscape fires, many of which are peat fires. beyond its global warming and human health impacts, palm oil production also takes a toll on biodiversity and human rights. Only 15% of native animals species.
Social and enviromental impacts
The palm oil industry has had both positive and negative impacts on
workers, indigenous peoples and residents of palm oil-producing communities. Palm oil
production provides employment opportunities, and has been shown to
improve infrastructure, social services and reduce poverty. However, in some cases, oil palm plantations have
developed lands without consultation or compensation of the indigenous people
occupying the land, resulting in social conflict. The use of illegal
immigrants in Malaysia has also raised concerns about working conditions
within the palm oil industrySome social initiatives use palm oil cultivation as part of poverty
alleviation strategies. Examples include the UN Food and Agriculture
Organisation's hybrid oil palm project in Western Kenya, which improves
incomes and diets of local populations, and Malaysia's Federal Land
Development Authority and Federal Land Consolidation and Rehabilitation
Authority, which both support rural development.
food vs fuel
The use of palm oil in the production of biodiesel has led to concerns
that the need for fuel is being placed ahead of the need for food, leading to
malnourishment in developing nations. This is known as the food versus
fuel debate. According to a 2008 report published in the Renewable
and Sustainable Energy Reviews, palm oil was determined to be a sustainable
source of both food and biofuel. The production of palm oil biodiesel does not
pose a threat to edible palm oil supplies. According to a 2009 study
published in the Environmental Science and Policy journal, palm oil
biodiesel might increase the demand for palm oil in the future, resulting in
the expansion of palm oil production, and therefore an increased supply of food
Environmental
Palm oil cultivation has been criticized for impacts on the natural
environment, including deforestation, loss of natural
habitats, which has threatened critically endangered
species such as the orangutan and Sumatran tiger, and
increased greenhouse gas emissions. Many palm oil plantations
are built on top of existing peat bogs, and clearing the land for palm oil
cultivation contributes to rising greenhouse gas emissions. Efforts to portray palm oil cultivation as sustainable have been made by
organizations including the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil, an
industry group, and the Malaysian government, which has committed to preserve
50 percent of its total land area as forest. According to research
conducted by the Tropical Peat Research Laboratory, a group studying palm oil
cultivation in support of the industry, oil palm plantations act
as carbon sinks, converting carbon dioxide into oxygen and, according to Malaysia's Second
National Communication to the United Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change, the plantations contribute to Malaysia's status as a net carbon
sink. Environmental groups such as Greenpeace and Friends of
the Earth oppose the use of palm oil biofuels, claiming that
the deforestation caused by oil palm plantations is more damaging for
the climate than the benefits gained by switching to biofuel and utilizing the
palms as carbon sinks.
While only 5 percent of the world's vegetable oil farmland is used for
palm plantations, palm cultivation produces 38 percent of the world's total
vegetable oil supply. In terms of oil yield, a palm plantation is 10 times more
productive than soya bean and rapeseed cultivation because the palm fruit
and kernel both provide usable oil Found in everything from shampoo to donuts, palm oil is now the most
common vegetable oil in the world—and also one of the world's leading
deforestation drivers.
Palm oil is extracted from the fruit of the oil palm tree, Elaeis
guineensis, which thrives in humid climates. The large majority of palm oil
production occurs in just two countries, Malaysia and Indonesia, where huge
swaths of tropical forests and peatlands (carbon-rich swamps) are being
cleared to make way for oil palm plantations, releasing carbon into the
atmosphere to drive global warming while shrinking habitats for a multitude of
endangered species.
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