Abstract

Nowadays, Indonesian palm oil faces agrarian, environmental, and social issues and has been subject to sharp criticism from the international community for many years. To answer this problem, the Indonesian government implemented a strategy through certification which ensured the achievement of sustainability standards, especially on the upstream side of the palm oil supply chain. The implementation of Indonesian Sustainable Palm Oil (ISPO) was an ultimate instrument that applied in particular to smallholders oriented towards managing land legal issues, plantation business licenses, plant seeds, and environmental management and to farmer organizations at the local level. However, this process faced quite complex challenges in the form of structural barriers that are very constraining. This study revealed the occurrence of the phenomenon of hollow governance when regulations are absent or collide with each other. The study also revealed institutional power and multi-level governance that made the governance process ineffective or counterproductive. With a qualitative approach to research conducted in three important palm oil provinces of Indonesia, this article aims to look at the issues of oil palm governance a bit more comprehensively. The study conceptualized what was referred to as low-functioning governance to describe how weak the institutions, organizations, actors, and resources are that support ISPO implementation, especially at the regional and local levels. This paper suggests improving and strengthening the ISPO oil palm governance if Indonesian palm oil companies and smallholders want to gain better credibility on sustainability abroad.

Highlights

  • The Indonesian Sustainable Palm Oil (ISPO) policy was an oil palm environmental governance instrument implemented at a national scale that was initiated by the Indonesian government more than a decade ago

  • Having learnt from the three provincial cases of oil palm in Indonesia, this study revealed that the implementation of the ISPO certification to meet the sustainability standard desired by consumers in the European Union or the international market has faced various structural challenges between the authorities in the governance hierarchy in Indonesia

  • There were regulatory and policy vacuums and complexity at the sub-national level which made the implementation of the ISPO certification not run smoothly in the regions

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Summary

Introduction

The increasing environmental consciousness of European consumers that leads them to consume according to green principles [1,2] has provided a strong impetus for foodexporting countries to implement strong sustainable policy on [3] and governance of the commodities they export. In view of the palm oil production, Indonesia responded to Sustainability 2022, 14, 1820. ISPO is a governance instrument, as well as a sustainability policy to fulfill the sustainable development principles of palm oil, which was formally enacted by the Presidential Regulation of the Republic of Indonesia Number 44 of 2020. The ISPO policy was a sustainability initiative to address the socio-ecological related problems attached to the palm oil of Indonesia. Indonesian palm oil has long been under very sharp criticism due to the socio-ecological impacts of its operation on ecological changes, deforestation, and massive land cover changes [5,6]

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