Singaporean food processing company
Wilmar International Limited
(
simplified Chinese
:
?益??
;
traditional Chinese
:
?益國際
;
Pe?h-?e-j?
:
Hong-ek Kok-che
)
[2]
[3]
is a
Singaporean
food processing
and
investment
holding company
with more than 300
subsidiary
companies.
[4]
: 18
Founded in 1991, it is one of Asia's leading
agribusiness
groups alongside the
COFCO Group
. It ranks amongst the largest listed companies by market capitalisation on the
Singapore Exchange
(SGX), being the second largest as of September 2010.
[5]
It was ranked 211th in the
Fortune Global 500
list in 2020.
[6]
It was ranked 3rd in the World's Most Admired Company (Food Production) by
Fortune
in 2019.
[7]
Wilmar International business activities include
oil palm
cultivation,
edible oils
refining, oilseeds crushing, consumer pack edible oils processing and merchandising, specialty fats,
oleochemicals
, and
biodiesel
manufacturing, grains processing and merchandising, and sugar milling and refining. In 2021, Wilmar placed 2nd on FoodTalks' Global Top 30 Specialty Oil Companies list.
[8]
It has over 500 manufacturing plants and an extensive distribution network covering
China
,
Indonesia
,
India
and some 50 other countries. The group employs a multinational workforce of more than 100,000 people.
[4]
: 28
Wilmar's merchandising and processing segment encompasses merchandising of
palm oil
and
laurics
-related products, operations of palm oil processing and
refinery
plants and crushing, further processing and refining of a range of edible oils,
oilseeds
,
grains
and
soybean
. Its consumer products include edible oils, rice, flour and noodles in China, Indonesia,
Vietnam
and India. Its plantation and palm oil mills segment engages in oil palm
cultivation
and
milling
.
Wilmar has come under criticism for its exploitation of
child labour
and
slave labour
, as well as unsafe working conditions on its plantations amidst other worker mistreatment incidents.
[9]
The company has also been exposed for its environmentally degrading practices, and
forced displacement
of poor populations, amongst other unethical behaviours.
[10]
[11]
[12]
Business profile
[
edit
]
Unilever
is one of the main customers of Wilmar. Unilever and Wilmar are members of the
Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil
(RSPO) which brings together retailers, producers and
NGOs
like
Oxfam
and
WWF
.
[13]
Palm oil
[
edit
]
Palm oil
, extracted from
palm fruit
pulp, is Wilmar's main product. Palm oil is the most widely used edible oil, and there are 42 million acres under cultivation worldwide. Commercial production has helped many communities in Africa and South-east Asia tackle local poverty. However, environmentalists have been concerned that such widespread cultivation has led to
deforestation
and
air pollution
, and is a threat to
endangered species
. In 2013, Wilmar changed its approach and endorsed
sustainability
principles, and now encourages their suppliers and customers to do likewise.
[
citation needed
]
History
[
edit
]
Wilmar was founded by
Kuok Khoon Hong
and
Martua Sitorus
on 1 April 1991
[14]
and commenced operations as a palm oil trading company.
Forbes named Kuok the twelfth richest person in Singapore in 2021
[15]
and Martua is the twelfth richest person in
Indonesia
.
[16]
- 1999
- Formed a joint venture with India's
Adani Group
called
Adani Wilmar
, to manufacture and distribute edible oils, flour, rice, pulses and sugar among others in India.
[17]
- 2003
- Established the first compound fertiliser manufacturing plant with a production capacity of 120,000 tonnes per year.
[
citation needed
]
- 2004
- 2005
- Acquired a controlling interest in
Jakarta Stock Exchange
listed PT Cahaya Kalbar Tbk, a producer of specialty oils and fats for the chocolate, cocoa confectionery industry, bakery and cakes ingredient industry, and beverage and food industry.
[
citation needed
]
- 2006
- Renamed Wilmar International Limited on 14 July 2006 upon completion of the reverse takeover of Ezyhealth Asia Pacific Ltd.
[18]
- 2007
- Completed the merger with Kuok Group's palm plantation, edible oils, grains and related businesses in a deal worth US$2.7 billion, as well as a restructuring exercise to acquire the edible oils, oilseeds, grains and related businesses of Wilmar Holdings Pte Ltd (WHPL), including interests held by Archer Daniels Midland Asia Pacific (ADM) and its subsidiaries in these businesses, for US$1.6 billion;
[
citation needed
]
- Formed a joint venture (JV) with Olam International Ltd and SIFCA Group, one of Africa's largest agro-industrial groups with significant interests across palm oil, cotton seed oil, natural rubber and sugar sectors in Africa. The JV was aimed at developing a regional leadership position in palm oil, natural rubber, sugar and potentially in other agricultural plantation crops in Africa;
[
citation needed
]
- Entry into the Philippines with the setting-up of two coconut oil mills and refineries in
President Manuel A. Roxas, Zamboanga del Norte
and
Gingoog, Misamis Oriental
.
[
citation needed
]
- 2008
- Formed a joint venture with Nizhny Novgorod Fats & Oils Group and Delta Exports Pte Ltd to spearhead expansion in Russia and the CIS countries.
[
citation needed
]
- 2010
- Expanded into the sugar business through the acquisition of
Sucrogen
Limited, the largest raw
sugar producer
and refiner in Australia, and PT Jawamanis Rafinasi, a leading sugar refinery in Indonesia.
[
citation needed
]
- Acquired Natural Oleochemicals, a leading oleochemicals producer with significant market share in Europe and Asia and a growing presence in the US.
[
citation needed
]
- 2011
- Further expanded into the sugar business through the acquisition of PT Duta Sugar International in Indonesia and Proserpine Mill in Australia
[
citation needed
]
- Expanded its African footprint to Ghana through the acquisition of Benso Oil Palm Plantations Limited, a company listed on Ghana Stock Exchange
[
citation needed
]
- 2012
- Acquired approximately 30,000 hectares of land in Nigeria for expansion of oil palm plantations;
- Established a 50:50 joint venture company, Yihai Kerry Kellogg Foods (Shanghai) Company Ltd, with Kellogg Company for the manufacture, sale and distribution of breakfast cereals and savoury snacks in China;
- Formed a 50:50 Joint Venture with Clariant Ltd for production and sales of amines and selected amines derivatives;
- Formed strategic partnership with Archer Daniels Midland Company (ADM) in tropical oils refining in Europe, global fertiliser purchasing and distribution, and global ocean freight operations. Launched Olenex CV. headquartered in Rolle, Switzerland to handle the sales and marketing of refined vegetable oils and fats to European Area and Switzerland
- Completed four palm oil milling plants with an aggregate hourly capacity of 200 MT
- In 2012, Wilmar was named the world's least environmentally friendly company by US news magazine
Newsweek
.
[19]
- 2013
- 2015
- 2018
- Wilmar joined forces with Aidenvironment, a consultancy to develop a group mapping database that allows Wilmar's suppliers to be monitored in relation to its No Deforestation, No Peat & No Exploitation Policy (NDPE) policy.
[23]
Wilmar planned to use satellites to monitor its suppliers making it impossible for them to get away with forest destruction.
[24]
- Wilmar broke ties with GAMA (a palm oil company owned by a former Wilmar executive) because GAMA had razed forests in Indonesia twice the size of Paris, but then decided to resume purchasing GAMA palm oil in 2019.
[25]
- 2020
- Wilmar International was included in the Dow Jones Sustainability Indices (DJSI) under the Asia Pacific Index for the Food, Beverage and Tobacco industry
[26]
- Wilmar International resigned 2 April from the steering group of the High Carbon Stock Approach (HCSA), a widely supported mechanism to distinguish forest areas that should be protected from degraded areas that can be developed.
[27]
- Wilmar secured a $200 million sustainability-linked loan to Wilmar International Limited to help advance the agribusiness’ sustainability agenda.
[28]
- A joint venture between Wilmar and PZ Cussons - PZ Wilmar - restated its commitment to building a sustainable future for palm oil.
[29]
Ethical issues
[
edit
]
In 2004,
Friends of the Earth Netherlands
performed a review of Wilmar's palm oil operations in
Sumatra
Riau as undertaken by PT Jatim Jaya Perkasa. Wilmar had 20,800 hectares of land there and the operation was financed by the Dutch
Rabobank
and the
International Finance Corporation
. Satellite photos proved that in 2004 the plantations were on sea shore
peat
rain forests
, the depth of the peat being four meters, whereas such land is actually protected under Indonesian law. Nevertheless, in 1997 Wilmar received permission to plant there despite it being peat land. According to locals, the plantation endangers the
Sumatran tiger
population that inhabits the area, and this became a point of conflict with Wilmar in 2004. Soon after, Wilmar sold PT Jatim Jaya Perkasa and joined the
WWF
Palm Oil Association.
[
citation needed
]
According to Friends of the Earth Netherlands, Wilmar International starts
forest fires
and violates the rights of local populations.
[11]
In July 2007
Friends of the Earth
and two local environmental organizations criticized Wilmar's
illegal forest felling
in
Kalimantan
, in Indonesia.
[13]
As a result of this campaign against Wilmar's projects in
Sambas
,
West Kalimantan
, the company agreed to implement a number of new measures and policies.
[30]
In July 2013, a report published by the WWF which documented that Wilmar (as well as the Indonesian company
Asian Agri
) were purchasing palm oil fruit which was grown illegally in
Tesso Nilo National Park
, Sumatra.
[12]
According to the
Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil
, both Wilmar and Asian Agri took immediate action to stop this illegal sourcing.
[31]
In October 2015, Wilmar and Sinarmas, reportedly involved with the case of forest fires in Indonesia that led to the island of Sumatra and Kalimantan burn and cause catastrophic
smog
[32]
In 2018, a
Greenpeace International
report
asserted that Wilmar International is "the biggest and dirtiest palm oil trader in the world"
[33]
In 2020, global campaign organisation Mighty Earth reported that Wilmar International was involved in cutting down of natural forests inside an oil palm concession in Indonesia's easternmost region of Papua, but Wilmar's investigation concluded that the deforestation is smaller than alleged and done by
smallholder
farmers.
[34]
Uganda
[
edit
]
According to
Friends of the Earth
, Wilmar and
Bidco Africa
through Bidco Uganda, have been involved in long running dispute over land with local communities.
[35]
According to
The Guardian
in March 2015, the land grab issue has plagued the community of Kalangala for a number of years. In July 2011, residents awoke to "find yellow machines churning up her land and razing the crops she had grown in a bid to make way for palm oil plantations."
[36]
Bidco Africa
and Wilmar have made no recorded statement on these matters. Again according to
Friends of the Earth International
, the projects implications include: Forced displacement, poor labour standards, deforestation, and insecurity amongst other.
[10]
The community have now taken the conglomerate to court.
[35]
[37]
In February 2016, the
United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP) received a petition from the Bugala Farmers Association in
Uganda
related to UNDP's association with Bidco Africa Ltd.
[38]
A complaint was also received by the UNDP's Stakeholder Response Mechanism (SRM) and Social and Environmental Compliance Unit (SECU).
[39]
In May 2016,
UNDP
visited Kalangala to further investigate the issues surrounding the matter.
[40]
In November 2016, the UNDP faulted a decision inviting Bidco Ltd into partnership with the United Nations Development Programme's Business Call to Action in Uganda.
[41]
Human right violations in 2016
[
edit
]
On 30 November 2016,
Amnesty International
published a report into working conditions on the Wilmar International plantations and refineries in Indonesia. It alleged human rights abuses, including "forced labour, low pay, exposure to toxic chemicals and discrimination against women".
[9]
According to
Amnesty International
, Wilmar International profited from 8- to 14-year-old child labour and forced labour. Some workers were extorted, threatened or not paid for work. Some workers suffered severe injuries from exposure to
herbicides
containing
paraquat
. Wilmar customers include
FAMSA
,
ADM
,
Colgate-Palmolive
,
Elevance
,
Kellogg's
,
Nestle
,
Procter & Gamble
,
Reckitt Benckiser
and
Unilever
. Wilmar palm oil may be used in popular products like
Magnum
ice-cream,
Colgate
toothpaste,
Dove (toiletries)
,
Knorr
soup,
KitKat
,
Pantene
shampoo,
Ariel
, and
Pot Noodle
.
[42]
NDPE Initiatives
[
edit
]
On 5 December 2013, Wilmar committed to a No Deforestation, No Peat & No Exploitation Policy (NDPE policy)
[43]
for both its own operations and third party suppliers.
[44]
It promised to stop buying from suppliers who cleared forest, drained peat land, or exploited locals.
[45]
This was lauded as a transformational step towards responsible and sustainable palm oil development.
[46]
Preliminary analysis estimated that Wilmar's commitment would eliminate more than 1.5Gt CO
2
emissions in total between 2016 and 2020.
[44]
Recognition / Awards
[
edit
]
In 2015, Wilmar won the Special Recognition Award at the Singapore Apex CSR Awards 2015 organised by the Global Compact Network Singapore, Singapore Business Federation and The Business Times. It was hailed for being the first major palm oil player to step up to ensure its supply chain is de-linked from any forest destruction and human rights abuse.
[47]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"Annual Report 2022"
(PDF)
. Wilmar International
. Retrieved
30 April
2023
.
- ^
"WILMAR INTERNATIONAL LTD (WIL:Singapore Exchange): Company Description - Businessweek"
. investing.businessweek.com. Archived from
the original
on 6 October 2012
. Retrieved
30 May
2016
.
;
- ^
"Wilmar International Limited,「?益??」"
.
The Kuok Group
. Retrieved
13 September
2020
.
- ^
a
b
"Annual Report 2020"
(PDF)
. Wilmar International
. Retrieved
16 October
2021
.
- ^
"Wilmar's Harvest"
.
Forbes.com
. 9 August 2010.
- ^
"Fortune Global 500"
. Retrieved
16 October
2021
.
- ^
"Fortune World's Most Admired Companies"
. Retrieved
30 May
2019
.
- ^
Fu, Rice (26 May 2021).
"2021年全球特?油脂企?30强"
.
FoodTalks
(in Chinese)
. Retrieved
24 January
2022
.
- ^
a
b
"Human rights abuses in your shopping basket"
.
www.amnesty.org
. 30 November 2016. Archived from
the original
on 30 April 2022.
- ^
a
b
FOEI.
"Palm oil landgrab in Uganda: Wilmar International's violations in Kalangala Island"
(PDF)
. Libcloud.s3.amazonaws.com. Archived from
the original
(PDF)
on 4 March 2016
. Retrieved
26 February
2016
.
- ^
a
b
"World's biggest palm oil trader shamed | Friends of the Earth Europe | Company involved in forest fires, deforestation and illegal activities"
. foeeurope.org. Archived from
the original
on 30 April 2022
. Retrieved
30 May
2016
.
- ^
a
b
"REPORT: Palming off a National Park: Tracking Illegal Palm Oil Fruit in Riau, Sumatra"
.
World Wildlife Fund
. Archived from
the original
on 31 December 2014
. Retrieved
31 December
2014
.
- ^
a
b
Painter, James (3 August 2007).
"Losing land to palm oil in Kalimantan"
. BBC News
. Retrieved
16 October
2021
.
- ^
"History & Milestones"
. Wilmar International
. Retrieved
16 October
2021
.
- ^
"#12 Kuok Khoon Hong & family"
.
Forbes
. 10 August 2021
. Retrieved
16 October
2021
.
- ^
"#12 Martua Sitorus"
.
Forbes
. 16 October 2021
. Retrieved
16 October
2021
.
- ^
"Adani Wilmar completes 20 years of Fortune brand; to set up new plants across businesses"
.
The Financial Express
. 24 November 2020
. Retrieved
10 March
2021
.
- ^
"palmnewsdetail"
. Malaysian Palm Oil Board. Archived from
the original
on 3 August 2016
. Retrieved
30 May
2016
.
- ^
"Green Rankings 2012: Global Companies"
.
The Daily Beast
.
- ^
"Aftenposten: Oljefondet kvittet seg med "verdens verste selskap" (in Norwegian)"
. aftenposten.no
. Retrieved
30 May
2016
.
- ^
Heyerdahl, Sindre (11 March 2009).
"Sindre Heyerdahl, E24. "OLJEFONDETS GIGANTTAP PA AKTIV FORVALTNING: Mener Gjedrem bløffer om investeringene" (in Norwegian)"
. e24.no
. Retrieved
30 May
2016
.
- ^
"Our History | Goodman Fielder"
.
goodmanfielder.com
. Retrieved
29 December
2022
.
- ^
"Raising the bar on palm oil: Wilmar using satellites to track deforestation, Corbion signs up to sustainable network"
.
- ^
"Tracking sustainable palm oil: Unilever uses geospatial analytics for "sophisticated" deforestation crackdown"
.
- ^
"Top palm oil producer Wilmar drops out of climate change group | ASEAN Today"
.
www.aseantoday.com
. 5 May 2020
. Retrieved
4 January
2022
.
- ^
"Wilmar debuts on Dow Jones Sustainability Index"
.
- ^
"Watchdogs lament palm oil giant Wilmar's exit from forest conservation alliance"
.
Mongabay Environmental News
. 8 April 2020.
- ^
"Wilmar inks sustainability-linked loan"
.
www.world-grain.com
.
- ^
"
'PZ committed to boost economy'
"
. 14 August 2020.
- ^
"Communities force Wilmar to address bad practices"
.
Down To Earth
. Retrieved
31 December
2014
.
- ^
"STATEMENT FROM THE RSPO ON THE IMPORTANCE OF TRANSPARENT AND RESPONSIBLE SOURCING OF FRESH FRUIT BUNCHES"
.
Roundtable On Sustainable Palm Oil
. 31 July 2013
. Retrieved
31 December
2014
.
- ^
"Perusahaan Grup Wilmar dan Sinar Mas Paling Banyak Menyumbang Titik Api"
. Retrieved
11 November
2015
.
- ^
"Oreo maker linked to destruction of orangutan habitat for palm oil in Indonesia"
.
Greenpeace.org
. 13 November 2018
. Retrieved
16 November
2018
.
- ^
"Palm oil giant Wilmar unfazed as watchdogs cry foul over Papua deforestation"
.
Mongabay Environmental News
. 8 December 2020.
- ^
a
b
FOEI (19 February 2015).
"Ugandan oil palm conglomerate taken to court over land-grab claims"
.
Foei.org
(FOEI)
. Retrieved
26 February
2016
.
- ^
Mwesigwa, Alon (3 March 2015).
"Ugandan farmers take on palm oil giants over land grab claims"
.
The Guardian
. Retrieved
26 February
2016
.
- ^
The Land Grab ? Uganda's farmers battle with palm oil producers
.
YouTube
. 12 July 2015.
Archived
from the original on 21 December 2021.
- ^
"Statement concerning UNDP, Business Call to Action and Bidco Africa Ltd"
.
- ^
"Social and Environmental Compliance Unit - Case Registry"
.
info.undp.org
.
- ^
NBS TV Uganda (29 May 2016).
"UNDP to Investigate Rights Violations at BIDCO"
– via YouTube.
[
dead YouTube link
]
- ^
"Bidco is not fit to join UNDP's project ? UN"
.
The Star
. Archived from
the original
on 19 November 2016.
- ^
THE GREAT PALM OIL SCANDAL: LABOUR ABUSES BEHIND BIG BRAND NAMES
Amnesty International 30 November 2016
- ^
"No Deforestation, No Peat & No Exploitation Policy"
(PDF)
. Wilmar International. 5 December 2013
. Retrieved
16 October
2021
.
- ^
a
b
"TFT and Climate Advisers Welcome Wilmar's Transformative Policies to Protect Forests and People | Climate Advisers"
.
climateadvisers.com
. Climate Advisers. 5 December 2013
. Retrieved
30 May
2016
.
- ^
Johnson, Nathanael (2 April 2015).
"48 hours that changed the future of rainforests"
.
grist.org
. Grist Magazine, Inc
. Retrieved
30 May
2016
.
- ^
Poynton, Scott (29 January 2014).
"Wilmar's 'no deforestation' commitment could revolutionise the way food is grown"
.
The Guardian
. Retrieved
30 May
2016
.
- ^
"Singapore businesses mark 10 years of CSR push | News | Eco-Business | Asia Pacific"
. eco-business.com
. Retrieved
30 May
2016
.
External links
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