(1) Yuriy Humber and Ranjeetha Pakiam, A Palm Oil King Develops a Green Conscience.
www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/ ... ndustry-to-clean-up
My comment:
(a) summary underneath the title in print: A palm oil king is clearing up the industry that made him billionaire
(b) Read only the first half. I am not interested in environmental issues.
(c) "And if one executive embodied this $50 billion business, it was KUOK Khoon Hong 郭孔丰 [1951- ; nephew of Robert Kuok 郭鶴年], a 65-year-old Singaporean commodities magnate. Known as the palm oil king, Kuok is a member of one of Asia’s most powerful business clans and co-founder and chairman of Wilmar International [Ltd 丰益国际, 'the industry’s biggest trading firm': Bloomberg News].
The name sounds like Cantonese.
(d) "Extracted from the orange pulp of a palm fruit, palm oil is the most used edible oil in the world. You use it every time you brush your teeth, wash your hair, eat ice cream, or put on lipstick. As commodities go, it’s cheap, versatile, and plentiful—palm fruit yields more oil than any other agricultural commodity. Cultivation of palm oil ties up more than 42 million acres worldwide, an area four times the size of Switzerland."
(i) palm oil
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palm_oil
(primarily [from] the African oil palm Elaeis guineensis [native to west and southwest Africa]; is naturally reddish in color because of a high beta-carotene content; not to be confused with palm kernel oil derived from the kernel of the same fruit)
Chemically palm oil is composed of glycerol and (saturated) palmitic acid (16:0, which means 16 carbons and no double bond) and (monounsaturated) oleic acid (18:1 cis-9, which means a double bond between carbons 9 and 10, in the cis form).
(ii) oleic acid
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oleic_acid
(The term "oleic" means related to, or derived from, oil of olive, the oil that is predominantly composed of oleic acid)
(e) photo caption: "The pulp and kernels of inedible palm fruits are separated, then squeezed, for oil."
(f) Yuriy Humber and Ranjeetha Pakiam, Palm Oil King Goes From Forest Foe to Buddy in Deal With Critics. Bloomberg News, Mar 12, 2015
www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/ ... l-foe-to-best-buddy
("Oil palm trees were introduced to Malaysia at the turn of the 20th century by the British, who brought the West African variety to pretty up the gardens of colonial homes. Today, Indonesia and Malaysia dominate supply. It’s a fragmented industry consisting of hundreds of large plantations and thousands of plots tendered to by a single family or community.")
There is no need to read the rest of the Bloomberg News report.
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