Expanding palm oil production to keep pace with the demand would require 36 million hectares of additional land whereas soybean, the second most popular oil crop, would need 204 million more hectares, the authors estimated.
While tropical rainforest is often cleared for oil palm plantations, alternatives such as soybean and rapeseed can be grown on existing farmland.
However, Erik Meijaard, lead author of the study and independent researcher affiliated with the University of Queensland, Australia, tells SciDev.Net: “We know a lot about palm oil and its impacts on biodiversity, environmental and social impacts, but we know very little about the other crops. You need to realise that saying no to palm oil means saying yes to something else.”
While few of the authors received funding for the study, the ethics declaration in the paper points out that Meijaard and two other colleagues have done paid work with the palm oil industry in the past, as well as the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil, a lobby group.
The enormous environmental damage caused by oil palm plantations justifies the attention it receives, but that may have led to other major oil crops being considered as alternatives, says Meijaard, adding that more research is needed to determine the environmental impacts of its alternatives.
“The rhetoric and polarisation are useful because it has put a lot of pressure on the [palm oil] industry to be more transparent and improve practices,” adds Meijaard. “At the same time, if it results in decision-making that’s not informed by good knowledge and understanding then I think you’re creating a problem.”
A good starting point for tackling the information gap would be to create up-to-date global maps showing where crops like soybean, rapeseed or sunflower are cultivated, says Meijaard. That will help determine how much land and what kind of natural ecosystems have been impacted by these crops, he adds
Source:
Palm oil alternatives require more land – study