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Will Switzerland's 'palm oil' referendum pass?

AFP
AFP - [email protected]
Will Switzerland's 'palm oil' referendum pass?
Posters ahead of Switzerland's March 7th referendums in 2021.

Switzerland votes Sunday on a free trade deal with Indonesia but the agreement, which opens up a vast potential market, could slip up over the issue of palm oil imports.

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Under the deal, tariffs would be gradually removed from almost all of Switzerland's biggest exports to the world's fourth most populous country, while the Swiss would abolish duties on Indonesian industrial products.

Anyone importing Indonesian palm oil must prove that it meets certain environmental and social standards.

But controversy around palm oil and its sustainability fuelled enough concern in Switzerland to trigger a public vote.

READ MORE: What you need to know about Switzerland’s ‘palm oil’ referendum

Two separate polls in February put support for the deal at 52 percent, with 41 to 42 percent against.

The agreement was signed in 2018 and approved by the Swiss parliament in 2019, but opponents were especially critical of Bern's move to reduce import duties on palm oil.

The deal contains exceptions for agricultural products, notably to protect Switzerland's sunflower and rapeseed oil production.

For palm oil, customs duties will not be removed but instead reduced by between 20 percent to 40 percent.

These reductions will only be granted on a volume limited to 12,500 tonnes per year -- and importers will need to prove that the palm oil has been produced in a sustainable manner. 

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Bears, tigers and orangutans

Campaign posters backing the economic partnership agreement show a Swiss bear hugging a tiger, while those against show an orangutan and baby clinging to a tree trunk, surrounded by flames.

The agreement aims to boost ties with Indonesia, which despite its population is only Switzerland's 44th biggest economic partner, and only its 16th biggest export market in Asia.

In 2020, Swiss exports to Indonesia amounted to just 498 million Swiss francs ($540 million, 450 million euros).

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"This is the first time that the people will be called upon to vote on a trade agreement," Swiss President Guy Parmelin said during a press conference on the vote.

Switzerland relies on around 30 such agreements which do not normally pose a problem, he said.

However, Parmelin called the vote an opportunity not only to respond to "legitimate concerns" but also to "de-demonise free trade".

He said such deals were of "paramount" importance for an export-led economy like Switzerland, which lacks both significant natural resources and a large domestic market -- and draws almost half its national income from abroad.

Without an agreement with Indonesia, Swiss companies would be put at a disadvantage, the president insisted, noting that the European Union is also negotiating a deal with Jakarta.

Indonesia is a growing economy with an increasingly affluent middle class, offering considerable potential for Swiss firms.

The government recommends voting for the deal, highlighting the restrictions put in place to ensure the sustainability of imported palm oil. 

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'It doesn't make sense' 

However, the agreement's opponents are far from convinced.

Palm oil is a key ingredient in a wide range of products from food to cosmetics but it has long been controversial.

Environmentalists say it drives deforestation, with huge swathes of rainforest logged in recent decades to make way for plantations.

"Palm oil is an emblematic product of free trade," Willy Cretegny, an organic winegrower who brought about the drive for a vote, told AFP.

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He convened a committee comprised of Greens, young Socialists, and agricultural organisations and unions.

In opposing the deal, he cited deforestation, human rights and environmental violations, and also the certification criteria for palm oil itself.

"The number one problem with free trade is that it is a tool to encourage consumption, even over-consumption," he added.

Cretegny questioned the "aberrations" of a set-up focused on exports -- to the detriment of subsistence agriculture for domestic consumers.

"We put fallow land aside in Switzerland, and we deforest elsewhere. It doesn't make sense," he said.

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