Malaysia’s benchmark crude palm oil futures are expected to average between RM3,850 and RM4,000 (US$823.53 and $855.61) per metric ton this year, a slight increase from the RM3,800 per tonne average in 2023, the Malaysian Palm Oil Association (MPOA) said on Monday. NSTP/MOHD AZREEN JAMALUDDIN
Malaysia’s benchmark crude palm oil futures are expected to average between RM3,850 and RM4,000 (US$823.53 and $855.61) per metric ton this year, a slight increase from the RM3,800 per tonne average in 2023, the Malaysian Palm Oil Association (MPOA) said on Monday. NSTP/MOHD AZREEN JAMALUDDIN

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia's benchmark crude palm oil futures are expected to average between RM3,850 and RM4,000 (US$823.53 and $855.61) per metric ton this year, a slight increase from the RM3,800 per tonne average in 2023, the Malaysian Palm Oil Association (MPOA) said on Monday.

The projection reflected ongoing market dynamics and supply-demand balances in the palm oil sector, MPOA chief executive Joseph Tek said in a statement.

The MPOA, which represents plantation firms, said crude palm oil (CPO) production in Malaysia, the world's second largest producer, could potentially exceed 19 million metric tonnes in 2024 after a strong performance in the first half of the year.

CPO output in the first six months of 2024 rose 10 per cent from a year earlier to 8.88 million tonnes, with production growth in peninsular Malaysia offsetting a decline in Sabah, the largest producing state, Tek said.

However, lower rainfall in the first half of 2024 could impact production in the second half, he said.

"The ability of Sabah to bolster production in the latter half of the year will be pivotal in determining if the elusive 19 million-tonne mark can be surpassed," Tek said.

In June, CPO production rose 12 per cent from a year earlier to 1.6 million tonnes, he said.

Tek reiterated concerns over ongoing labour shortages in plantations, citing indicators showing a decline in oil and kernel extraction rates across many parts of the country.

Malaysia has imposed a hiring freeze on migrant workers since March 2023 pending a review into recruitment practices, but had allowed some people to be brought in this year to address shortages in the agriculture sector.

The government, however, stopped new migrant worker arrivals last month to reassess the need for foreign manpower.

Almost 80 per cent of Malaysia's plantation workers are migrants, mostly from neighbouring Indonesia.