Being Environmentally Responsible
SD Guthrie proudly upholds a Zero-Burning Policy that has been in place since 1985, demonstrating our leadership in sustainability. We have pioneered the Zero-Burning Replanting Technique, which has effectively replaced the outdated slash-and-burn method and set the benchmark for environmentally responsible oil palm replanting.
Zero-Burning Replanting Techniques
Click here to find out more about our Zero-burning policy and haze management initiative.
Preserving our Soil, Reducing our Carbon Footprint and Practicing Sustainable Pest Management
Our priority has always been about protecting our assets from the ground up, and this includes preserving the nutrients in our soil to encourage organic microbial growth for healthier palm fruits. That means we need to reduce the amount of nitrogen fertiliser and pesticides wherever possible. By doing this, we also reduce our carbon footprint and create a safer working environment for our field staff.
Our Crop Protection Research Section has developed pest and disease control methods that are environmentally friendly and economically viable to protect our palms. We utilise biological controls to create an ecosystem in our palm oil plantations that functions to regulate itself. Our Integrated Pest Management (IPM) approach, as we call it, is employed across all our palm oil plantations.
Barn Owls
Meet our most celebrated resident at the plantations, Tyto alba! We build nesting boxes every 10 hectares in our estates to encourage these barn owls to populate the plantation. These cute tenants help manage the rat population in our estates, our most common pest. This has enabled us to significantly reduce rat infestations, which means fewer rounds of rat baiting and less damage to our fruit bunches.
Beneficial Plants
While driving along our estates, visitors will notice strips of attractive plants at the fringe of each oil palm row. These plants have been planted with the intention to curb the population of the bagworm, a leaf-eating caterpillar that damages palm fronds.
By growing these beneficial plants, we encourage the propagation of the bagworm’s natural enemies, predators and parasitoid insects that attack and suppress bagworm outbreaks. Cultivated in the right ratio, these plants protect our oil palms from leaf-eating caterpillar pests within a 120 to 450-metre radius.