Sustainability Science Practice and Policy, Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages 37-54 , 01/01/2022

Governing sustainability in the Thai palm oil-supply chain: the role of private actors

Somjai Nupueng, Peter Oosterveer, Arthur P.J. Mol

Abstract

Private actors are essential partners in the sustainability governance of commodity-supply chains such as palm oil. However, their actual contribution to promoting sustainability is also contested. This article assesses the role of private actors in the governance of the palm oil-supply chain in Thailand by comparing supply-chain actors that are certified with the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) standards and non-certified supply-chain actors. The comparison entails input supply and production, collection and sales, processing and storage, and distribution. Building on the concept of (global) value chains, we examine the following governance dimensions in our comparison: the management of contracts and agreements, the role of trust in transactions, the relative power of various actors, and the control over smallholder farmers’ access to the market. Primary data were collected in the Surat Thani and Krabi Provinces in southern Thailand. We found that the RSPO-certified palm-oil chain was shorter, more transparent, and that farmers received higher prices than the non-RSPO-certified chains.

Document Type

Article

Source Type

Journal

Keywords

governancePalm oilprivate actorsRoundtable on Sustainhable Palm Oil (RSPO) certificationsustainabilityvalue chain

ASJC Subject Area

Environmental Science : Environmental Science (all)Social Sciences : Geography, Planning and Development


Bibliography


Nupueng, S., Oosterveer, P., & Mol, A. (2022). Governing sustainability in the Thai palm oil-supply chain: the role of private actors. Sustainability Science Practice and Policy, 18(1) 37-54. doi:10.1080/15487733.2021.2021688

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