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Indonesia to permit palm oil exports from May 23 as ban fails to cool down price

Indonesia would lift its palm oil export ban from Monday, following improvements in the domestic cooking oil supply situation, President Joko Widodo said on Thursday. 

The world’s top palm oil exporter has since April 28 halted shipments of crude palm oil (CPO) and some derivative products to try to tame soaring prices of domestic cooking oil. 

The decision comes despite bulk cooking oil having not yet receded to the targeted 14,000 rupiah per litre as the government considered the welfare of 17 million workers in the palm oil industry, the president said in a video statement. Mr Jokowi, as the president is known, said that the supply of bulk cooking oil had now reached a level greater than what the domestic market needed. 

“Average price of (bulk) cooking oil before the export ban in April was 19,800 rupiah per litre, and after the ban, the average price dropped to around 17,200 to 17,600 rupiah per litre,” he said. 

Indonesia came up with the ban on exports of the widely-used vegetable oil as a means of controlling domestic prices, but pressures have been mounting for it to be eased as farmers protested that there was no demand for their palm fruits. The ban has rattled global vegetable oil markets that were already struggling after the war in Ukraine removed a big chunk of sunflower oil supply.

The government has struggled to control prices and secure local supplies since December, with a raft of measures, ranging from price caps, to export curbs and cash handouts for households and hawkers. But all that failed to pull down prices to the government target of 14,000 rupiah (97 US cents) per litre of bulk oil. The surging costs helped push inflation to a three-year high in April. 

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