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Thu 11 Mar 2010

Unilever Expects No Major Cost Cut
Monday, 01 February 2010 10:06

Consumer goods group, Unilever, will need to take a disciplined approach to operations in 2010 but does not expect major cost cuts in the year, its chief executive said on Tuesday.

Asked if Unilever would have to cut costs in 2010 to maintain the performance of 2009, Paul Polman said: "We will have to continue running the company with discipline but don't expect any major announcements in 2010."

Polman was speaking to reporters on the sidelines of a conference in the Saudi capital.

In November, the Anglo-Dutch firm reported an increase in third-quarter underlying volume sales and pledged its turnaround under Polman would continue into the fourth quarter and 2010.

Meanwhile, the world's largest user of palm oil has suspended purchases of edible oil from Indonesian group Sinar Mas on concerns over rain forest destruction.

Unilever, which uses palm oil in such products as Dove soap, Ben & Jerry ice cream, and margarines like Stork, cancelled its annual 20 million pound ($32.6 million) contract with Sinar Mas after a critical report by environmental group Greenpeace.

Anglo-Dutch Unilever said on Friday it was suspending purchases from PT SMART, which is part of Sinar Mas, until the Indonesian group could give proof that none of its plantations was contributing to the destruction of rain forests.

Greenpeace alleges that Sinar Mas, Indonesia's biggest palm oil producer and the second biggest in the world, has been responsible for widespread deforestation and peatland clearance, practices which release vast amounts of carbon dioxide.

Sinar Mas was not immediately available for comment. In the past, it has denied accusations its activities were damaging the environment.

"The Greenpeace claims are of a nature that we can't ignore. Unilever is committed to sustainable sourcing.

Therefore, we have notified PT SMART that we have no choice but to suspend our future purchasing of palm oil," said Unilever's Chief Procurement Officer Marc Engel in a statement.

Unilever said an independent audit of palm oil suppliers in early 2009 had highlighted areas of concern which were being addressed on an individual basis, but the Greenpeace report had prompted the group into immediate action.

"Unilever's decision could represent a defining moment for the palm oil industry. What we're seeing here is the world's larger buyer of palm oil using its financial muscle to sanction suppliers who are destroying rain forests and clearing peatlands, said Greenpeace director John Sauven in a statement.

Unilever consumes around 1.3 million tonnes of palm oil each year and has pledged to buy only from certified sustainable plantations from 2015, while around 90 percent of worldwide supply comes from Indonesia and neighbouring Malaysia.

Source: Reuters

 

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