Papua
New Guinea: Women most affected by oil palm plantations
Extensive areas
of PNG’s tropical forests have been cleared to give way to export-oriented
oil palm plantations, which have been established under the “Nucleus
Estate Smallholder Scheme”. This means that a central company
having its own plantation also contracts small farmers to supply
it with oil palm fruit. The structure of the Nucleus Estate Smallholder
Scheme and the nature of oil palm itself are raising serious concerns
amongst civil society.
Most of the
social and environmental impacts of oil palm plantations have
been well documented (see WRM bulletins 104, 86,
74). However, one issue that has received little attention
is that oil palm plantations have differentiated gender impacts.
For instance,
the oil palm companies only pay the men, although women –and even
the whole family- also work in harvesting the oil palm fruit.
This means that the men can spend the money they receive in whichever
way they see fit, while women are left without payment. Additionally,
the fact that women work long hours doing back-breaking work for
little reward within oil palm plantations, means that at the end
of the day they are too tired to carry out properly the extra
burden of cooking and taking care of the children.
Growing, collecting
and hunting of food is an important part of PNG culture. Women
sell goods in the village markets, thus obtaining an income. At
the same time, this activity provides for a valued time for socialising
with other village women. When customary lands are converted to
oil palm, many of these age-old traditions are lost and women
find themselves left without both the income and the opportunity
of socialising.
Concerned about
the changes that oil palm is generating in their community and
about pollution from the oil palm mill affecting their rivers
and their children’s health, local women established the Sorovi
Women’s Association. The Association aims at bringing women together
to discuss and find practical solutions to these issues.
The activities
of the Association includes capacity building regarding the social
and environmental impacts resulting from oil palm plantations
and palm oil processing. At the same time, the Association is
also working to help women to develop small-scale income generating
activities that they can undertake to reduce their reliance on
growing oil palm to earn a living and support their families.
There is no
need to convince local people of the value of their natural resources
– they depend on them every day for their survival. They need
land to make bush gardens, which still supply the majority of
Papua New Guineans with their daily food needs. They need access
to forests to gather fuel wood and timber for building houses
and canoes. They depend on healthy rivers for drinking, cooking
and bathing. The saying in Papua New Guinea is ‘Graun Em Laip’
– land is life! As long as you have land and forests you’ll always
have a roof over your head and you’ll never go hungry! Unfortunately,
oil palm plantations have negative impacts on all these aspects
and it is women who suffer the most.
Article
based on information from: Australian Conservation Foundation,
http://www.acfonline.org.au/default.asp?section_id=96, "Anatomy
of a Campaign", by Andrea Babon,
http://www.acfonline.org.au/uploads/res_Habitat_AP_3.pdf