A CONSERVATION scientist from Chester Zoo has been invited to advise European politicians on the best way to tackle the world's palm oil crisis.

Dr Simon Dowell was asked to appear before the EU Natural Resources Commission in Brussels to discuss embracing sustainable palm oil and halting deforestation.

The Commission, a sub-committee of the European Committee of Regions, is examining how the EU can best respond to the crisis.

Dr Dowell, Chester Zoo’s Science director, said: “We want to make sure that members of the Commission better understand the scale of the palm oil problem, deforestation and the catastrophic impact it’s having on wildlife.

“Palm oil is the most widely consumed vegetable oil on the planet.

"It is used in around 50% of packaged supermarket products, including many manufactured and processed foods such as biscuits and chocolate bars, soaps and detergents, and in many cleaning products.

“When compared to other vegetable oils, however, palm oil has some distinct advantages.

"It is very high yielding and so if we were to switch from producing vegetable oil from palm oil to other sources, we would need at least six times as much land to produce the same amount of oil.

"So banning palm oil is likely to be counterproductive.

"It would shift the issue elsewhere, creating even greater habitat loss and negative impact on biodiversity.

“Palm oil is here to stay, and we do not think calls for an outright ban are the answer.

"We believe that part of the solution is embracing sustainable palm oil and halting deforestation.

“What we need to do is increase demand for sustainable palm oil – bringing individuals, communities and businesses on board.”

Unsustainable production of palm oil is wiping out huge areas of rainforest in order to provide the ingredients for food and household products.

This is the first time that Chester Zoo experts have appeared before such a committee and comes after the zoo’s conservationists spearheaded a campaign which saw Chester named the world’s first ‘Sustainable Palm Oil City’ earlier this year.

The movement requires restaurants, schools, workplaces and attractions across each city to support sustainable palm oil, which conservationists proclaim is the best way to prevent habitat destruction for wildlife such as orangutans.

Dr Dowell added: “When the city of Chester came together to become the world’s first Sustainable Palm Oil City earlier this year, we knew it was just the start.

"The campaign in Chester has helped businesses to influence their suppliers to switch to sustainable ingredients.

"These changes have then been passed along the chain to other customers. It’s a snowball effect.

“Chester Zoo will continue to influence at political and industry levels and we plan to help the UK Government achieve its target of having a 100% sustainable supply chain for palm oil by the end of 2020.”

Decision-makers in towns and cities can join the Sustainable Palm Oil City movement by visiting www.chesterzoo.org/palmoil