Rubber firm has plans in Cambodia

Jun 28th at 14:26
28-06-2013 14:26:08+07:00

Rubber firm has plans in Cambodia

Kuala Lumpur-based Felda Global Ventures Holdings Berhad (FGV), the third-largest palm oil operator in the world, said it plans to cultivate rubber inside Cambodia.

“We are . . . consolidating by expanding into countries like Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos – planting other crops such as rubber,” Sabri Ahmad, FGV Group president, said in a company statement distributed on Wednesday.

According to FGV, a reason for the Cambodia expansion is that the country still has much land available; however, the company did not reveal any details on the of the investment and plantations or when they plan to come in.

FGV’s main business is palm oil, but in addition, the company also plants rubber and cocoa.

Srey Chanthy, a Cambodia-based independent agricultural analyst, told the Post in an interview yesterday that one concern for newcomers in Cambodia could be that “recently the rubber prices have been going down a little bit”.

However, he said that not only will demand still be there, but Cambodia still has room for potential expansion, citing the fertility of land for planting crops such as rubber.

He said the primary product from Cambodia is processed over the border in Vietnam before being exported to Cambodia’s largest market, which is China. But “I wish these investors [in Cambodia’s rubber sector] invest in [local] processing plants”, said Chanty.

In China, a significant volume of rubber consumption is exported as rubber end products (tyres) to Europe or North America, according to Singapore-based International Rubber Study Group (IRSG).

Data by IRSG say that natural rubber consumption in China is expected to rise by 7.2 per cent in 2013, after a 4.5 per cent growth last year.

Demand in North America was expected to grow 4.2 per cent this year after shrinking by 6.9 per cent in 2012, IRSG said.

FGV appears not to be the only Malaysian player interested in Cambodia’s rubber sector.

In February the Post reported that the Rubber Industry Smallholders’ Development Authority, which facilitates the Malaysian government’s rubber-replanting program, was prepared to develop 20,000 hectares of rubber and oil-palm plantations in Cambodia, provided suitable land can be found.

Last month, the Post reported that Prime Minister Hun Sen boasted that the country’s rubber industry could soon overtake Vietnam.

That same week, the UK watchdog Global Witness released a report accusing Vietnamese rubber firms of perpetrating a “land grabbing crisis” in Cambodia and Laos.

phnompenh post



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Flights planned from Beijing to Siem Reap, Phnom Penh

Chinese flag carrier Air China is expected to launch the first non-stop flights from Beijing to Cambodia as early as November this year, officials said yesterday.

K-pop a boon for cosmetics shops

Kim Hyun-joong is looking at you. From a poster outside of a hair salon, from a shop window, in a TV commercial or on local social media sites, the South Korean...

Noodle maker tries instant route

Cambodia has always been a source for a broad variety of raw materials from the agricultural sector. The country exports many of these materials to neighbouring...

Airline will offer more China trips

Cambodia Angkor Air plans to launch chartered flights between Siem Reap and the southeastern coastal Chinese city of Xiamen next month.

Competition could hurt SME future

Due to a lack of awareness and human resources, small and medium enterprise owners could suffer from competition as ASEAN moves toward economic integration...

In carbon, gains for agriculture

Paying Cambodian farmers to capture carbon by not removing mulch during planting and harvesting would help support climate change mitigation, reduce soil...

Gov’t revenues rise 11 pct

Government revenues totalled more than $700 million over the first four months of the year, an 11 per cent year-on-year increase, data from the Ministry of Economy...

Discount shops attracting crowds

Two thousand five hundred – for Mom Dalin, this is more than just a random number or the price of a coffee, it is her way of making a living.

‘Chinatown’ for Cambodia

Tourism officials yesterday said they were considering building a “Chinatown” in Phnom Penh in order to target more tourists from the second-biggest economy in the...

Business chambers merge with Eurocham

The French and German chambers of commerce have both merged into the larger European Chamber of Commerce in Cambodia in order to gain combined strength and be more...


MOST READ


Back To Top