Certification, labelling and traceability of palm oil: can we build confidence from trustworthy standards?

The present article is aimed at presenting various types of certification standards which are presently – or could be – applied to the production of palm oil. Doing so, it provides an overview of the existing mechanisms under way both at the European and global level and it addresses the controversi...

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Main Authors: Rival Alain, Montet Didier, Pioch Daniel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2016-11-01
Series:Oilseeds and fats, crops and lipids
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1051/ocl/2016042
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spelling doaj-18960187ece84354a859db6fb1606b3f2021-04-02T15:24:54ZengEDP SciencesOilseeds and fats, crops and lipids2272-69772257-66142016-11-01236D60910.1051/ocl/2016042ocl160042sCertification, labelling and traceability of palm oil: can we build confidence from trustworthy standards?Rival Alain0Montet Didier1Pioch Daniel2Cirad, DGD-RS, DRASEICirad, UMR 95 QualisudCirad, UPR 114 BioWooEBThe present article is aimed at presenting various types of certification standards which are presently – or could be – applied to the production of palm oil. Doing so, it provides an overview of the existing mechanisms under way both at the European and global level and it addresses the controversial issue of reliance and accuracy of certification standards. The RSPO certification scheme provides an interesting example of such controversies. The case of palm oil reflects the recurring issue of mandatory vs. voluntary standards and the underlying question of the respective role of public vs. private stakeholders in the designing and further implementation of such standards. The high number of standards, appellations or labels creates some – understandable – confusion amongst consumers and deciders and this point is of paramount importance if confidence is on the agenda. The authors conclude on the urgent need for collaborative and multidisciplinary research in order to provide certification standards with science-based evidence and thus strengthen their reliability. The success of a certification scheme depends also greatly on the ability of stakeholders to gain a premium price to offset the incurred costs.https://doi.org/10.1051/ocl/2016042Certificationlabellingtraceabilitypalm oilRSPO
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rival Alain
Montet Didier
Pioch Daniel
spellingShingle Rival Alain
Montet Didier
Pioch Daniel
Certification, labelling and traceability of palm oil: can we build confidence from trustworthy standards?
Oilseeds and fats, crops and lipids
Certification
labelling
traceability
palm oil
RSPO
author_facet Rival Alain
Montet Didier
Pioch Daniel
author_sort Rival Alain
title Certification, labelling and traceability of palm oil: can we build confidence from trustworthy standards?
title_short Certification, labelling and traceability of palm oil: can we build confidence from trustworthy standards?
title_full Certification, labelling and traceability of palm oil: can we build confidence from trustworthy standards?
title_fullStr Certification, labelling and traceability of palm oil: can we build confidence from trustworthy standards?
title_full_unstemmed Certification, labelling and traceability of palm oil: can we build confidence from trustworthy standards?
title_sort certification, labelling and traceability of palm oil: can we build confidence from trustworthy standards?
publisher EDP Sciences
series Oilseeds and fats, crops and lipids
issn 2272-6977
2257-6614
publishDate 2016-11-01
description The present article is aimed at presenting various types of certification standards which are presently – or could be – applied to the production of palm oil. Doing so, it provides an overview of the existing mechanisms under way both at the European and global level and it addresses the controversial issue of reliance and accuracy of certification standards. The RSPO certification scheme provides an interesting example of such controversies. The case of palm oil reflects the recurring issue of mandatory vs. voluntary standards and the underlying question of the respective role of public vs. private stakeholders in the designing and further implementation of such standards. The high number of standards, appellations or labels creates some – understandable – confusion amongst consumers and deciders and this point is of paramount importance if confidence is on the agenda. The authors conclude on the urgent need for collaborative and multidisciplinary research in order to provide certification standards with science-based evidence and thus strengthen their reliability. The success of a certification scheme depends also greatly on the ability of stakeholders to gain a premium price to offset the incurred costs.
topic Certification
labelling
traceability
palm oil
RSPO
url https://doi.org/10.1051/ocl/2016042
work_keys_str_mv AT rivalalain certificationlabellingandtraceabilityofpalmoilcanwebuildconfidencefromtrustworthystandards
AT montetdidier certificationlabellingandtraceabilityofpalmoilcanwebuildconfidencefromtrustworthystandards
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