Companies across the board are coming under increasing scrutiny for ESG risk. This is compounded by growing regulations covering areas including deforestation, emissions reduction, energy consumption and climate disclosures. As a seed-to-shelf agribusiness, Golden Agri-Resources (GAR) needs to ensure our supply chain will be ready to comply with emerging trends around ethical, resilient and sustainable supply chains. This applies equally to our own plantations and our suppliers, among them hundreds of thousands of smallholder farmers.
GAR’s Social and Environmental Policy (GSEP), established in 2015, has set a benchmark for sustainable, responsible practices across our supply chain and is one way we’re addressing these issues to ensure customers can rely on deforestation-free supply.
Wherever commercially feasible, many supply chains are also shifting towards local sourcing and nearshoring to improve resilience and lower their carbon footprint. By using renewable energy, investing in green technology and shortening supply chains, businesses can improve sustainability standards, their carbon footprint and efficiency.
GAR has spent over a decade mapping, analysing and improving its supply chains to ensure that palm oil production is resilient, sustainable and decoupled from regulatory and deforestation risk – all the while meeting customer demands. We have expanded the traceability of our total palm oil supply chain in Indonesia to achieve 99% Traceability to the Plantation (TTP), and we have 100% traceability to our own estates. We’re using this experience to extend traceability into other non-palm commodities such as sugar, soy and coconut.
Palm oil traceability data is available to our customers through the blockchain-powered GAR Traceability Platform. This is vital due diligence ahead of upcoming regulations like the European Union Deforestation Regulation and will prepare our supply chain for future developments like the UK Environment Act.
This data doesn’t just allow us to demonstrate deforestation-free status. It helps us to understand our operations, suppliers and smallholders so we can support them in areas where improvement is needed to ensure their practices are more responsible, more sustainable and even more productive.
Collaboration across the supply chain, including smallholder education, is key to making this work. That’s why we have committed to train 100,000 Indonesian smallholders in sustainable palm oil agriculture by 2035.
Agricultural supply chains have significant potential to support decarbonisation efforts and play a role in the carbon economy. Plantations support a huge amount of organic material that can sequester carbon, as well as provide nature-based solutions and biomass energy sources to replace fossil fuels, ensuring food security while contributing to renewable fuel supplies.
The implementation of carbon-related regulations, carbon taxes, carbon credits and carbon trading are also likely to generate new sources of cash income that can facilitate the repayment of coupons or loans, using verifiable carbon certificates. Carbon linkages also provide investors and lenders with a clearly measurable and verifiable payoff mechanism which plugs the shortcomings of green or sustainable loan obligations.