Monday, November 29, 2010

Bilangan Dan Berat Buah Tandan Kelapa Sawit

10 - 12 buah tandan boleh dihasilkan oleh pokok matang kelapa sawit setahun . Setiap pokok matang akan menghasilkan buah berat 20 kg sebulan.  Oleh itu setiap pokok hasilkan 10 x 20 = 200 kg x .50 = RM 100. (Jika harga kilang RM500/tan) .Tanam 1000 pokok = RM100,000.00. Untuk menjana pendapatan 1 juta setahun kenalah menanam 10,000 sawit / 148 = 68 ha.


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Friday, November 26, 2010

Shortage of oil palm seedlings

Monday May 31, 2010

Shortage of oil palm seedlings

By JACK WONG
jackwong@thestar.com.my


Demand set to rise as Sarawak steps up development of oil palm plantations
KUCHING: Sarawak, which is facing a shortage of oil palm seedlings, is expected to see rising demand as the state has yet to develop a quarter of its target of one million hectares of oil palm plantations, said State Assistant Minister in the Chief Minister’s Department Naroden Majais.

He told an oil palm seedling entrepreneurship course here recently that Sarawak needed 16.4 million seedlings last year but the supply only amounted to 10 million.
Juara Beetuah Sdn Bhd managing director Michael James attributed the shortage in Sarawak, especially over the past two years, mainly to exports of oil palm seedlings to Kalimantan, Indonesia.

He said such sales had however abated as the Indonesian plantations, most of which were owned by Malaysian firms, had started their own nurseries.
Juara Beetuah, a major seedling producer and the only company in Sarawak awarded the competency certificate by Malaysian Palm Oil Board (MPOB), owns nurseries in Lundu (Kuching Division), Bintulu and Lawas in northern Sarawak.
Some EU MPs on a visit to Malaysia say the sector has helped take people out of poverty
James said his company produced up to 100,000 seedlings a year, which were mainly supplied to MPOB. The latter then distributes them to smallholders

Juara Beetuah’s other customers are government agencies like Sarawak Land Consolidation and Rehabilitation Authority and Felda, which are involved in plantation projects.
“We produce based on advance contracts. On top of that, we produce another 10% for the market,” he told StarBiz.

Juara Beetuah uses high-yield clones that are able to produce between 28 and 33 tonnes of fresh fruit bunches per hectare a year.
However, James said the output would depend on several factors such as soil conditions and plantation management methods.
The company sells seedlings for RM8 to RM12 each, depending on transportation costs.

Sarawak needs more oil palm seedlings

Sarawak needs more oil palm seedlings

By SHARON LING


KUCHING: Sarawak needs to produce more oil palm seedlings to meet a shortage faced by plantations in the state. Assistant Minister in the Chief Minister's Department Naroden Majais said the state was short of some 6mil seedlings last year.

"We required 16.4mil seedlings last year but were only able to supply 10mil seedlings. Each new hectare of oil palm requires about 200 seedlings," he said. He added that demand for seedlings would continue to rise because Sarawak was targeting 1mil ha of oil palm plantations, out of which 250,000ha have yet to be developed.

"The land has already been identified and we will develop it in stages. This will require more seedlings, while existing plantations will also need seedlings to replace their older trees. "So there is a big opportunity for local entrepreneurs to produce seedlings on a commercial basis," he said when opening an oil palm seedling entrepreneurship course here Tuesday.

The two-day course, organised by the Bumiputera Entrepreneurship Development Unit in the Chief Minister's Department and the Malaysian Palm Oil Board (MPOB), was attended by 45 participants. The unit's adviser Datuk Adzmy Abdullah estimated that Sarawak would need 500ha of nurseries to supply the targeted 1mil ha of oil palm plantations. He said there were currently 130 entrepreneurs in the state cultivating oil palm seedlings but more were needed to meet current and future demand. "For example, there are only four certified nurseries in Mukah supplying 20,000ha of plantations," he said.

He also said cultivating seedlings was a potentially lucrative industry as the production cost was about RM5 per seedling compared to a selling price of RM10 to RM15 for a year-old seedling. On the course, Adzmy said, the participants would sit for theory and practical tests at the end. Those who passed will receive the Oil Palm Nursery Certificate of Competency from MPOB.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Smallholders can help boost palm oil yield

By Rupa Damodaran

The Malaysian palm oil industry can improve its current productivity of four tonnes oil yield per hectare by improving on the productivity of smallholders, says Plantation Industries and Commodities Minister Tan Sri Bernard Dompok. "Smallholders productivity can be enhanced through new technology and good agricultural practices," he said at the launch of the International Palm Oil Sustainability Conference 2010 in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, yesterday.

Oil palm smallholders who include those under Felda, Risda and Felcra are expected to raise their current level of below 3.5 tonnes to 4.0 tonnes by 2014, with the support of the replanting scheme by the government to replace old low-yielding trees. Dompok said the current productivity is about 20 per cent of its theoretical potential oil yield of about 17 to 18 tonnes per hectare.

Malaysia, the second largest producer and major exporter of palm oil, last year produced 17.56 million tonnes of palm oil and exported close to 15.87 million tonnes..The total revenue generated from the exports of palm oil and its products in 2009 was valued at RM49.59 billion, or 7.5 of the country's gross domestic product.

Dompok said the world today has a fair and substantial quantity of RSPO certified and sustainable palm oil from producer nations including Malaysia. However, the uptake of Certified Sustainable Palm Oil has been extremely slow. Although research has proven that palm oil is the better oil, there are moves to label palm oil in food products. These include the proposal to the Australian Senate to label palm oil products in isolation from other food products and linking it to issues such as deforestation and the endangerment of the orang utan.

"This proposal has the consequence to disadvantage palm oil and impede trade and consumption of this nutritional product," he said.

Dompok said for every hectare of oil palm, Malaysia preserves four hectrae of permanent forest, which is a very healthy balance in terms of land use policy. Meanwhile, Malaysian Palm Oil Council (MPOC) chairman Datuk Lee Yeow Chor, commenting on the European Union's recent statement that 90 per cent of Malaysia's palm oil exports will not be affected by the Renewable Energy Directive, said:

"For us, even the remaining 10 per cent is of concern ... we want to correct the misconception that affect the demand of our palm oil."

Lee said the MPOC is well-geared to tackle issues such as the blame for loss of wildlife habitat and biodiversity. The RM20 million Malaysian Palm Oil Wildlife Conservation Fund has enabled the survey of orang utan population in Sabah together with the Sabah Wildlife and the Borneo Conservation Trust and Hutan NGOs. Yesterday, MPOC signed a memorandum of understanding with the Sabah Wildlife Department and Shangri-Rasa Ria Resort for the funding and launch of the Sabah Wildlife Rescue and Care Centre.

Read more: Smallholders can help boost palm oil yield http://www.btimes.com.my/

Friday, August 20, 2010

Minister: New devt model to benefit NCR land owners

Borneo Post 

KUCHING: The Ministry of Land Development will come up with a new mechanism to develop Native Customary Rights (NCR) land to bring greater benefits to its owners. Minister of Land Development Dato Sri Dr James Jemut Masing said NCR land totalled some 1.5 million hectares in the state but the majority of its owners remained poor. “We will continue to develop NCR land, but my officers will come up with new mechanisms to review how this land could be developed. “You must understand that our NCR landowners continue to be the poorest of the poor in Sarawak. “The objective of the government to develop the NCR land has always been to eradicate poverty,” Masing told reporters at his residence here yesterday.

Two years old Oil Palm grows well in one of the NCR land belongs to small holder

He said under the new mechanism, both the federal and the state governments would provide financial assistance to the stakeholders to develop the NCR land. “Under the present land concept, the NCR landowners have 30 per cent stake, the developers would get 60 per cent and the remaining 10 per cent owned by Pelita (Land Consolidation Development Authority). “But we have seen from 1996 most of these land owners remain very poor because the profit is used to pay back the loans which could be as high as eight per cent per annum,” he said. “The concept would be similar to Felda and Felcra so that NCR land owners will get the maximum benefit, with almost zero interest to be paid back to the government,” he explained.
Masing said the government had targeted to develop some two million hectares of land, most of which would be NCR land, by 2015.

Currently, some 850,000 hectares of land had been planted with oil palm. He said besides oil palm, his ministry would also be focusing on rubber and other cash crops. “But most of the land will be planted with oil palm. This is because there is no more land left in the peninsular and Sabah to increase the acreage of the crop,” he said, adding that the crop would be planted in mini estates with the size of between 200-500 acres.
Masing said one of the challenges of the palm oil industry was its regimented nature. “As such rubber is better. For instance, we don’t have to tap it if it’s raining. Unlike oil palm, we have to harvest it regardless of the weather condition,” he explained. He also explained that his ministry would also have to identify suitable crops for certain terrain.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Govt takes steps to help smallholders up oil palm yield

May 25, 2010, Tuesday

KOTA KINABALU: The government is placing emphasis on enhancing smallholders’ productivity through the adoption of better planting materials, automation, mechanisation and good agriculture practice.

Tan Sri Bernard Dompok

Smallholders, who account for 40 per cent of the crude palm oil produced in the country, at present, only manage to yield an average of between 2.5 and 3 tons of oil per hectare per year. “The industry average is about four tons and we want the smallholders to catch up to this level. The average can even go up to between six and seven tons in the future.

S“There are 300,000 smallholders in the country and we have to see how they can benefit from the experience of bigger plantation companies,” said Plantation Industries and Commodities Minister Tan Sri Bernard Dompok at a press conference after opening the International Palm Oil Sustainability Conference here yesterday.



It is important for smallholders to step up production as the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) initiatives, now limited to big plantation companies, would be ultimately extended to smallholders.



RSPO would be introducing a certification scheme for smallholders and is doing whatever possible for the smallholders to be certified. As it is aimed to help the industry, the smallholders standard would not be the same as that for big producers.

On the impact of the lobby mounted against palm oil in Europe, Dompok said it had not affected offtake from Malaysia as crude palm oil stocks now stood at only 1.6 million against a high of two million tons recorded a year ago. “This is a good sign that exports are on the uptake”, he said, adding that Malaysia was still looking at all avenues of hope, including taking up the issue with the World Trade Organisation (WTO).


Meanwhile, the Malaysian Palm Oil Council chief executive officer Tan Sri Dr Yusof Basiron said the industry was supporting the initiatives of the RSPO but other countries were also embarking on their own certification requirements. “Germany wants to have its own and the United States is trying to come up with a certification programme, so where is this going to end?” he asked.

He said Malaysia was still thinking of the best approach to harmonise and unify into some kind of sustainability standards, perhaps, at a national level in order to be able to respond to the regulatory mandatory certification that the European Union and United States were trying to put in place.



Dr Yusof said both countries were trying to put in their own version, bypassing even the RSPO, and this was very troublesome for the producers who have to handle three or four certification schemes. “This is beyond the affordability of smallholders as well,” he added. —

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Weaker April CPO production numbers

Boreneo Post

May 18, 2010, Tuesday


KUCHING: April’s crude palm oil (CPO) production numbers came in slightly weaker than March with month-on-month (m-o-m) numbers down 5.2 per cent while year-on-year (y-o-y) numbers were increased 1.8 per cent.

WEAKER PRODUCTION: April’s CPO production numbers comes in slightly weaker than March with month-on-month numbers down 5.2 per cent while year-on-year numbers were increased 1.8 per cent.

According to ECMLibra Capital Sdn Bhd (ECMLibra), exports were weaker as expected and fell 8.2 per cent m-o-m. On a y-o-y basis though, exports increased 8.1 per cent and on a cumulative basis, increased 7.4 per cent year to date (YTD).

The research house pointed out that this had been driven predominantly by China. It stated that cumulative exports to China were now 33 per cent increased y-o-y but could taper off from here as the country had reported high stocks level.

It reported that causing some drag however on export was India. The switching of CPO to soy oil appeared prevalent there since y-o-y, exports to India had dropped 25 per cent.

ECMLibra reported that stock levels declined a slight two per cent into April following the slight decline in production and also likely due to local disappearances. This was in line with its expectations and the research house believed that more of the same can be expected into May. Again, judging from historical movements, stock levels typically dropped going into May and June before picking up.

Meanwhile, the research house revealed that CPO future closed down week-on-week (w-o-w) by 2.5 per cent as prices took a cue from crude oil. Soy prices reacted the same as this was despite there being much bearish news in the market. In fact for CPO, May export numbers from the first to fifteenth had so far looking positive as shipments were reportedly increased 18 per cent to 23 per cent. Shares at home were generally negative w-o-w with only Genting Plantations Bhd and Boustead Holdings Bhd gaining slightly.


ECMLibra stated that corporate news for the week includes Kuala Lumpur Kepong Bhd purchase of a glycerine and fatty acids plant in Germany for some RM245 million. Little details on the company had so far been disclosed but a ballpark base case contribution of RM21 million for next year had been mooted.


The research house also stated that most attention over the next two weeks would be on corporate results. IOI Corporation Bhd announced its results last Friday which was as expected a weak quarter.

Annualised and adjusted, the ninth month for the current financial year (9MFY10) was 2.8 per cent above house estimates but 15.4 per cent below street. The group recorded a CPO average selling price of RM2,330 for year to date this year, lower than the Malaysia Palm Oil Board average of RM2,376.

ECMLibra saw that CPO prices have potential to weaken slightly further if crude oil continues to do so as well. Otherwise, prices have no reason for major gyrations given the lack of catalysts.

Friday, May 7, 2010

M’sia’s palm oil industry to reach RM60 billion

May 6, 2010, Thursday Borneo Post

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia’s palm oil industry is worth about RM50 billion annually and chances are that revenue may even touch RM60 billion this year, if current prices remain steady until the end of the year.


PALM OIL: The EC’s position will therefore recognise that the important property of tropical forests for climate change policy is the high sequestering capacity of tropical foliage, tall wooded plants and multi-decade crop rotation. That crude palm oil is being sold at RM2,550 a tonne is certainly good news for planters, smallholders and all those associated with the industry. But then there are detractors.

It has been reported that the European Union (EU), through its environmental ministries and commissions, has been involved in funding up to 70 per cent of the operating budgets of environmental NGOs in efforts to paint a not-so-rosy picture about palm oil.

And these NGOs have been viciously campaigning against palm oil imports into the EU, especially for biofuels, says Tan Sri Dr Yusof Basiron, CEO of the Malaysian Palm Oil Council, who regards this as a “senseless and immoral attack on exported commodities such as palm oil produced by developing countries.” Writing in his blog, he said, such funding implicates the EU for creating barriers to trade for agricultural products from developing countries. “Unlike the EU, developing countries do not have access to financial resources to fight such government funded vicious campaigns.

The eventual outcome will be untold miseries where poor farmers in developing countries lose their source of income as their export commodities are unable to enter the EU market,” he said. This is something which palm oil-producing countries will have to seriously address if the livelihood of their planters and farmers is to be safeguarded. Almost half a million people are employed by the palm oil industry in Malaysia.

Interestingly, a campaign by Friends of the Earth to pressure the European Commission (EC) to rule a tree plantation is not a forest that restricts the recognition of palm oil as a renewable biofuel in the EU may have failed. According to a newsletter produced by “Palm Oil and Green Development Campaign”, this means that the EC may classify oil palm plantations as forests, which would therefore meet the sustainability criteria of the EU’s Renewable Energy Directive (RED).

Under RED, land which used to contain primary forest prior to 2008 but no longer does, cannot be used for biofuel feedstock to meet the EU’s 10 per cent target under RED. It has been reported that the draft guidelines define a “forested area” as “areas where trees have reached, or can reach, at least heights of five metres, making up a crown cover of more than 30 per cent”. They would normally include forest, forest plantations and other tree plantations such as palm oil.

“The EC’s position would therefore recognise that the important property of tropical forests for climate change policy is the high sequestering capacity of tropical foliage, tall wooded plants and multi-decade crop rotation.

Short rotation coppice the practice of repeatedly cutting young tree stems down may qualify if it fulfils the height and canopy cover criteria,” the newsletter stated. It would seem that the EC has recognised the environmental benefits of palm oil as highly energy efficient, high yield and economically beneficial biofuel as the oil palm trees sequester or remove more carbon dioxide than other biofuel crops.


Another development that has put palm oil in positive light is research from Wageningen University in the Netherlands which shows that palm oil is the most efficient energy crop. The university’s finding is a rejection of environmental NGOs and the anti-palm oil lobbyists who consistently claim that palm oil is unsustainable.

Its research found that palm oil, sugar cane and sweet sorghum are currently the most sustainable energy crops. These commodities also produce “far smaller quantities of greenhouse gases than fossil fuels”.

The university’s analysis considered nine different energy crops against nine different sustainability criteria with palm oil coming out on top while biofuel from maize from the United States and wheat from Europe scored far lower. The report’s author, Sander de Vries, concluded that sustainable sugar canes and oil palms get the most energy per hectare and cause the least environmental damage.


De Vries also highlighted a major advantage of the oil palm crop was that, unlike other energy crops, it produces enough residue to power the oil extraction processes. Another positive development for palm oil took place in the European Parliament recently when Dr Gernot Pehnelt, founder and director of GlobEcon, an independent research and consulting institute based in Germany, released a new study that revealed the prejudiced nature of the EU’s Renewable Energy Directive towards foreign biofuels.

The report, entitled European Policies Towards Palm Oil: Sorting Out Some Facts demonstrated that the assumptions contained in the directive about the ecological impact of foreign biofuels reflected political and not scientific or economic reality. Dr Pehnelt came to the defence of the rich biodiversity in oil palm plantations, their excellent crown cover that oil palms provide and the yield per hectare advantages of this low-energy and low-fertilizer crop.

“Sadly, many of the claims that foreign biofuels, specifically palm oil, are a threat to the environment are seriously flawed, some even completely unfounded,” he said, adding that the side effects of the flawed policies could give rise to political friction and trade disputes to severe economic handicaps for developing countries. “This new study makes a strong case that RED discriminates against non-EU producers of biofuels, such as Asian palm oil. “Perhaps most importantly, palm oil acts as a substantial driver of economic growth in the developing world, drastically reducing hunger and poverty in regions that actively cultivate this valuable crop.” — Bernama

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Negligible impact from biodiesel mandate


March 27, 2010, Saturday
KUCHING: Plantation stocks should benefit less so from palm oil price impact but more so from the removal of risk relating to the bearing of subsidies which are now directed at petroleum companies.

NEGLIGIBLE IMPACT: Research believes the impact of Malaysia’s biodiesel mandate on palm oil demand for next year would be negligible given that it would only be introduced in stages within central Peninsular Malaysia.


OSK Research Sdn Bhd (OSK Research) believed the impact of Malaysia’s bio­diesel mandate on palm oil demand for next year would be negligible given that it would only be introduced in stages within central Peninsular Malaysia.


Assuming that the central Peninsular Malaysia uses 50 per cent of Malaysia’s total diesel consumption of 10 million tonnes, maximum demand for palm oil biodiesel next year will amount to just 146,000 tonnes if implemented all at one go rather than in stages.
Hence, the impact to palm oil price should be positive but likely insignificant, added the research
firm.


Generally, Malaysia exported a total of 227.5 thousand tonnes of biodiesel last year, compared with available capacity of 1.5 to 1.7 million tonnes, indicating a very low utilisation rate of 15 per cent, which was consistent with global biodiesel plant utilisation.
The research firm highlighted the company in its coverage with biodiesel exposure in Malaysia is Sime Darby Bhd (inherited from Golden Hope) with capacity of 90,000 tonnes per annum, breaking it down from 30,000 tonnes in Carey Island plus 60,000 tonnes from Teluk Panglima Garang.


That also included Kulim that had effective capacity of 100,000 tonnes per annum in Tanjong Langsat, Johor. However, Kulim’s biodiesel unit had been running at a loss due to selling price and low capacity utilisation. Last year, the segment reported a RM10.4 million loss.
While utilisation rates should improve with the biodiesel mandate, it was highly uncertain if it would be a good enough to turn around loss-making biodiesel ventures, as the pricing mechanism was still unknown.


To recap, Malaysia’s biodiesel mandate would start in June next year. The blend would be five per cent and would be introduced in stages in the central states of Peninsular Malaysia.
The subsidies on biodiesel would be borne by petroleum companies but the government would bear the RM43.1 million cost of developing six petroleum depots with blending facilities, sources from Business Times.


OSK Research said the country’s overall utilisation rate would remain relatively low at less than 50 per cent even upon full implementation, assuming biodiesel produced for export market remained constant.

Monday, February 1, 2010

Schemes for NCL small pockets being fine-tuned

February 1, 2010, Monday
KUCHING: Land Development Minister Dato Sri Dr James Masing said the state government is intensifying efforts to develop native customary land (NCL). He said even the smaller pockets of NCL or untitled land will soon be developed through government schemes. “I have spoken to the Chief Minister (Pehin Sri Abdul Taib Mahmud) about land development involving smaller NCL. Indeed we are now fine-tuning the schemes and ways to develop these smaller pockets of NCL,” he said when asked to comment on Dayak Chamber of Commerce and Industry (DCCI)’s query on government schemes for native customary rights (NCR) landowners.

Masing clarified that DCCI president Tan Sri Leo Moggie had probably referred to the federal government agencies when he (Moggie) suggested that “government agencies” study the possibility of allowing NCR landowners to apply for government schemes even though they do not have land titles. Masing said: “He (Moggie) was probably referring to federal government because as far as Sarawak government is concerned we do have schemes to help NCR landowners. We are now fine-tuning schemes in our efforts to help the smallholders.”

During a DCCI function here on Saturday, Moggie said he was worried to see land disputes involving the government and NCR landowners and that there should be a more flexible approach to get more people involved in land schemes.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Silicon 23 organic fertilizer

This picture were taken on 22 Oct 2009. Half kilogramme of Silicon 23 organic fertilizer was applied to the affected palm.