Malaysia’s Oil Palm Growers Should Invest in Africa
By Manirajan Ramasamy and Angus Whitley
Aug. 25 (Bloomberg) — Malaysian palm oil producers, which include Sime Darby Bhd. and IOI Corp., should invest in Africa and
Growers in the Southeast Asian nation have used up about 4.4 million hectares (11 million acres) of the 6.6 million available for oil palm, Malaysian Plantation Industries and Commodities Minister Peter Chin Fah Kui said today.
“There’s a need to look beyond Malaysian shores,” Chin told reporters in
The price of palm oil, used in cooking and as an alternative fuel, reached a record 4,486 ringgit ($1,330) a metric ton in Kuala Lumpur in March. The commodity traded at 2,628 ringgit at 12:30 p.m. local time, 4.4 percent higher than a year earlier.
No Room
The land available for planting oil palm in
There’s almost no space left for planting on Peninsular Malaysia, home to most of the population and the capital city of
The area covered by oil palm in
Africa is “the next frontier” for agricultural production, Singapore-based companies Wilmar and partner Olam International Ltd. said last November when paying S$190 million ($134 million) for a 25 percent stake in Sifca Group, an Ivorian commodity producer. They pledged to invest a further $110 million.













