This is an outdated version published on 2020-09-08. Read the most recent version.

THE IMPLEMENTATION OF NON-DISCRIMINATION PRINCIPLE IN PALM OIL TRADE BETWEEN INDONESIA AND THE EUROPEAN UNION

Authors

  • Muhammad Hanif Faishal
  • Aktieva Tri Tjitrawati2

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.48080/jae.v17i3.816

Abstract

The increase in the popularity of palm oil brings new issues regarding environmental
conservation. The European Union, as a region that pays more attention to ecological
conservation, proposes a plan to ban palm oil of up to 0% by 2021. Indonesia and Malaysia as the biggest palm oil producers against the proposal and believe that it is a violation against the non-discrimination principle of GATT 1994. The violation happens because the European Union only bans palm oil, but keeps allowing the production of other vegetable oil, which is also the raw material of biofuel. Therefore, the analysis of whether the proposal to ban palm oil by the European Union is the violation against the non-discrimination principle is fundamental. This study is carried out by using the normative research to obtain the result that affirms if the proposal to ban palm oil by the European Union is inconsistent with the GATT clauses. The practical implication of this study is to provide a recommendation of literature on whether the proposal included in RED II violates the non-discrimination principle.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2020-11-27 — Updated on 2020-09-08

Versions

How to Cite

Muhammad Hanif Faishal, & Aktieva Tri Tjitrawati2. (2020). THE IMPLEMENTATION OF NON-DISCRIMINATION PRINCIPLE IN PALM OIL TRADE BETWEEN INDONESIA AND THE EUROPEAN UNION. PalArch’s Journal of Archaeology of Egypt / Egyptology, 17(3), 1570-1582. https://doi.org/10.48080/jae.v17i3.816 (Original work published November 27, 2020)