Indonesian palm oil curbs, biodiesel plans to hit world vegetable oil supplies
A MOVE by top palm oil exporter Indonesia to restrict shipments and boost domestic biodiesel consumption is set to squeeze global vegetable oil supplies already undercut by lower output in South-east Asia and Latin America.
Edible-oil buyers, including price-sensitive consumers in South Asia and Africa, will bear the brunt of the supply-side constraints. This comes just as demand is forecast to climb, with China easing Covid-19 controls and India boosting purchases.
Indonesia’s export restrictions and increased use of crops for making biofuels both pose further challenges to food-importing countries hurting from last year’s red-hot inflation, which pushed prices of key staples such as wheat, corn and soya beans to all-time or multi-year highs.
“The implementation of (the) B35 mandate in Indonesia in 2023 definitely changes (the) global palm oil supply-and-demand situation in 2023,” said Oscar Tjakra, a senior analyst at the food and agribusiness research division at Rabobank.
“I’m now expecting that global palm oil supply and demand will be in a slight deficit.”
Indonesia’s B35 mandate stipulates that diesel sold in the country from Feb 1 has to contain 35 per cent palm-based fatty acid methyl ester. In comparison, Malaysia has partially implemented a 20 per cent biodiesel blending mandate, and other countries have measures calling for single and double-digit percentages of bio content for diesel or petrol.
BT in your inbox

Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
The Indonesia Biofuel Producers Association said that the B35 mandate will take up 11.4 million tonnes in palm oil this year, up from 9.6 million in 2022 under the country’s B30 measure.
Indonesia, producer of more than half of global palm oil supplies, also tightened trade rules this year, allowing exporters to ship just six times their domestic palm oil sales volume, less than a fourth-quarter 2022 ratio of eight times.
“Indonesian palm oil exports definitely will drop, as output will decline, and domestic consumption will increase,” Fadhil Hasan, an Indonesian Palm Oil Association (Gapki) official, said.
Indonesia produced 51.3 million tonnes of palm oil in 2022 and exported 33.7 million tonnes, Gapki estimated. In 2023, palm oil output is expected to be at 50.8 million tonnes, and exports at 26.4 million tonnes, it added.
Benchmark palm oil futures are expected to be within a range of RM4,000-4,200 (S$1219-1280) per tonne this year, said Malaysian Palm Oil Board director-general Ahmad Parveez Ghulam Kadir.
That is lower than the record average for Malaysian palm futures of RM4,910 a tonne, reached in 2022, with prices skewed higher by disruption to edible-oil supplies and distribution due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But it is still higher than in the earlier years. Malaysian crude palm oil prices averaged RM3,260 a tonne between 2018 and 2022.
On Friday (Jan 13), Malaysian palm futures were trading around RM3,860, hovering near a three-week low.
Other threats to edible-oil supplies include Argentina’s worst drought in 60 years, which is forecast to cut its soya bean output to 41 million tonnes, down from the 48 million tonnes previously estimated.
India’s palm oil imports in December jumped 94 per cent from a year earlier to a record high, as palm oil’s higher discount to rival vegetable oils led refiners to boost purchases.
“Palm oil’s discount to rival oils is around US$300 a tonne. We expect this discount to narrow to around US$200 by March,” said Sandeep Bajoria, chief executive of Sunvin Group, a vegetable oil brokerage.
“But India’s strong demand for palm oil will continue, as it is still the cheapest edible oil.”
Palm oil purchases by China, the world’s second-largest importer, are also expected to climb this year, after dropping sharply in 2022 because of Beijing’s then-strict Covid controls. REUTERS
Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services