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Posted

Palm oil firm faces probe.

By The Nation.

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Morakot Industry being investigated by DSI over failure to use a third of imports to ease shortage

Major edible oil producer Morakot Industry Co came under the spotlight yesterday after authorities found it had not used a 1,400-tonne government-issued inventory of palm oil to produce bottled cooking oil despite acute shortage.

Hoarding and other charges had yet to be filed against the company, said Pol Col Narat Savetanun, deputy chief of the Department of Special Investigation (DSI), who inspected the firm's factory in Samut Prakan province.

The edible oil shortage has worsened in the past few months as bottled cooking oil has disappeared from the market amid rising prices.

Narat said Morakot Industry had an import quota of 5,000 tonnes of palm oil from the government for January-February for the production of 3.8 million bottles of cooking oil.

However, the firm used up only 3,600 tonnes of the quota while leaving 1,400 tonnes in storage tanks, thus failing to honour an agreement with the Commerce Ministry to produce bottled cooking oil from the raw material to ease the domestic shortage.

The 1,400 tonnes of raw material, imported from Malaysia by the government, is enough to produce 960,000 bottles of cooking oil, which are supposed to retail at Bt47 per bottle, as required by the government.

Narat said the DSI would request the Department of Internal Trade to take the unused 1,400 tonnes of palm oil to its custody.

Managers of Morakot Industry Co, however, said the 1,400 tonnes of palm oil was not used because it had earlier already used its own raw material to produce bottled cooking oil for the government programme so the stock was merely a reimbursement.

Narat said this case would become clear in the next couple of days.

Morakot Industry is one of 10 companies allocated palm oil import quotas to produce bottled cooking oil.

Altogether, they got an import quota of 30,000 tonnes but only a portion was used to produce cooking oil, resulting in the nationwide shortage.

Besides Morakot Industry's factory, authorities also inspected the Srinakarin branch of major retail outlet Makro and the factory of another cooking oil firm, Lamsoon Thailand, at an industrial estate in Samut Prakan province.

Chaipat Sonthisirikul, a Makro store manager, said the producer of Yok cooking oil had delivered 4,000 cases of its products for sale at his store in the past couple of days.

Makro currently limits the quantity of cooking oil each customer can buy to two bottles, Chaipat said.

The government has been under fire for failing to make cooking oil widely available over the past few months, with allegations that the situation was worsened by politicians seeking to gain financially from the shortage.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva said the DSI could investigate these allegations and that deputy premier Suthep Thaugsaban would chair a top-level meeting on this issue on Tuesday to find more effective solutions.

Suthep admitted that the first round of imports totalling 30,000 tonnes of palm oil had failed to ease the shortage while the second round of imports totalling another 120,000 tonnes had not arrived, despite being approved on February 1.

Leucha Oonyuang, president of the Surat Thani palm growers' association, said excessive imports would later hurt domestic growers, who are still suffering from the falling price of oil palm, despite the exorbitant price of refined cooking oil.

"Now, it's only Bt6-7 per kilo after rising to Bt10 for a few days, running counter to that of the refined oil price," he said.

Prapan Koonmee, a spokesman for the yellow-shirt movement, claimed the shortage had hit every household but had enriched politicians in power, including those in the ruling Democrat Party.

"The government is solving the problem at the wrong place," he said, suggesting that authorities should investigate if there were large illegal imports of crude palm oil now stored in Surat Thani, Samut Sakhon and Samut Songkhram.

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-- The Nation 2011-02-20

Posted

Democrat politicians and others are making big money out of hoarding Palm Oil ! Suthep is from Suratthani and he and family are big producers of PO, but he appears to know nothing about corruption in the industry ??? :D ............bit like sergant Schultz B)

Posted

I don't know too much about the Dem's being involved in hoarding. It might help him (them) financially, but it certainly won't help him politically.

I went shopping yesterday, I wasn't looking for palm oil, I don't use it, but I did notice the shelves were all empty at several stores, including a small grocery store and a couple of big chains. I also noticed that there wasn't much of any of the imported oils either except for olive oil. One had no corn oil, canola, soybean or rice bran oil.

I imagine the next big news will be about a huge drop in heart disease in Thailand!

Posted

Democrat politicians and others are making big money out of hoarding Palm Oil ! Suthep is from Suratthani and he and family are big producers of PO, but he appears to know nothing about corruption in the industry ??? :D ............bit like sergant Schultz B)

Besides innuendo by Jatuporn, what is the evidence for this charge?

Posted

Suthep is from Suratthani and he and family are big producers of PO, but he appears to know nothing about corruption in the industry ??? :D

To be fair, he often appears to know nothing about quite a few subjects.

Posted

Ain't it sad one of the major issues facing the Thai government is a shortage of cooking oil. Hopefully one day they will get beyond trying to change how eggs are sold and fixing the cooking oil shortage, and instead "seriously" work major social and political issues facing Thailand. Someday.

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