KUALA LUMPUR: Norway’s $1 trillion sovereign wealth fund, the world’s largest, has pulled out of more than 33 palm oil companies over deforestation risks during the last seven years, a green group said on Thursday.
Norway’s Government Pension Fund Global (GPFG), which released its annual report on Wednesday, sold stakes in more than 60 companies due to deforestation — including 33 firms involved in palm oil — Rainforest Foundation Norway said.
“It’s great to see that the GPFG is taking action against deforestation,” Vemund Olsen, a senior policy adviser at the Oslo-based group said on Thursday.
“The divestments should be seen as a warning shot to those investors and companies still involved in deforestation,” Olsen, whose group has monitored the GPFG’s investments since 2010, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
As the world’s most widely used edible oil, palm oil is found in everything from margarine to biscuits and soap to soups, as well as in biofuel.
But in recent years, the industry has come under close scrutiny from green activists and consumers, who have blamed it for clearing forests for plantations and causing fires, along with the exploitation of workers.
Green groups have often accused Norway of double standards by investing billions of dollars in palm oil or soya farmers while also giving cash to nations from Brazil to Indonesia to slow deforestation.
Norway signed a $1-billion deal with Indonesia to help protect its tropical forests in 2010, and the first payment for reduced emissions was agreed last week.
Since 2012, the GPFG has become a more active shareholder and now pushes sustainability and ethics among its investments and drops firms that fail to meet its standards.
Marthe Skaar, spokeswoman at Norges Bank Investment Management, which manages the fund, confirmed that more than 60 divestments had been made due to deforestation risks, including 33 palm oil firms, since 2012.
Divestments in two palm oil companies happened as recently as last year, said Skaar, adding that the fund does not disclose the names of such companies. Most palm oil is grown in Indonesia and Malaysia.
In a report released earlier this month, GPFG said that it engages with companies it owns stakes in to push them to cut their ties to deforestation.
It is currently asking banks in Indonesia, Malaysia and Brazil to adopt no deforestation criteria for their loans to the agricultural sector, the report said.
“The GPFG has realized that deforestation reduces its long term returns on investments,” says Olsen.
“It’s increasingly clear that companies involved in deforestation, directly or through their supply chains, are a major liability to investors.”
Norway’s wealth fund ditches 33 palm oil firms over deforestation
Norway’s wealth fund ditches 33 palm oil firms over deforestation
- Norway’s Government Pension Fund Global (GPFG) sold stakes in more than 60 companies due to deforestation — including 33 firms involved in palm oil
- As the world’s most widely used edible oil, palm oil is found in everything from margarine to biscuits and soap to soups, as well as in biofuel
Kuwait PMI climbs to 54.5; Egypt falls to 48.9 in February: S&P Global
RIYADH: Kuwait’s non-oil private sector continued to expand in February, supported by growth in output and new orders, while business conditions in Egypt weakened, an economy tracker showed.
According to the latest Purchasing Managers’ Index surveys released by S&P Global, Kuwait’s PMI rose to 54.5 in February from 53 in January, extending the current run of improving business conditions to a year and a half.
The expansion in Kuwait’s non-oil sector aligns with a broader trend across the Gulf Cooperation Council region, where countries are pursuing diversification strategies to reduce reliance on crude revenues.
The surveys were conducted before regional tensions escalated following US and Israeli strikes on Iran and Tehran’s retaliatory attacks across the Gulf, which have since disrupted markets and energy trade.
Commenting on the February survey, Andrew Harker, economics director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said: “Growth momentum strengthened in Kuwait’s non-oil private sector in February as companies were again successful in securing new business.”
According to the report, key factors supporting expansions in new orders and business activity included the provision of good-quality products at competitive prices and successful marketing efforts.
The rate of job creation was modest in February and unchanged from January.
Firms continued hiring staff for advertising and project-related work, resulting in a twelfth consecutive monthly increase in employment.
“The main issue facing firms at present is being able to grow workforce numbers quickly enough to keep up with workloads,” said Harker.
He added: “With backlogs rising at a fresh record pace for three months in a row now, fulfilling customer requirements in a timely manner is becoming more difficult, although companies did expand their purchasing activity at a near-record pace in February to help make sure the necessary materials are available going forward.”
Overall input cost inflation hit a nine-month high in February, with both purchase prices and staff costs rising at faster rates compared to January.
The report added that some companies increased their selling prices in response to higher input costs.
Regarding the outlook, companies expressed optimism, with sentiment reaching a 26-month high in February, driven by product variety, competitive pricing and good-quality customer service.
Egypt’s non-oil sector contracts
Egypt’s non-oil private sector contracted in February, driven by rising costs and softer demand, according to S&P Global.
The country’s PMI fell to 48.9 in February from 49.8 in January.
Although the reading remained below the 50 neutral threshold, it was still above its long-run average of 48.3, the report said.
Output declined for the first time in four months in February, and all five sub-components of the PMI indicated weaker business conditions compared to January.
“The February PMI data pointed to a slowdown in the Egyptian non-oil private sector as activity curtailed and new order volumes weakened,” said David Owen, senior economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence.
That said, he added that the dip followed an unusually strong run in business performance, and that the latest figures are consistent with annual GDP growth of approximately 4.5 percent.
Egyptian non-oil companies also reported a decline in order book volumes during the month.
Sales fell across manufacturing, wholesale and retail, and services, while construction was the only monitored sector where new orders improved.
Employment fell for the third consecutive month in February, though at a slower rate, as companies continued active job cuttings and hiring freezes.
The report revealed that cost pressures accelerated across the month, driven by rising global commodity prices, particularly oil and metals.
Selling prices, however, were up only fractionally, with just a small proportion of firms choosing to pass cost increases onto their customers.
“Egyptian non-oil companies were notably exposed to the uplift in global commodity prices, with firms emphasising the impact of higher prices for oil and metals, resulting in the sharpest increase in business costs for nine months and hitting margins at a time when firms are reluctant to raise their selling prices,” said Owen.
He concluded: “Firms will therefore be keen to see commodity markets settle, especially as recent periods of high input cost inflation have typically constrained business output.”









