Saturday, December 15, 2012

Gaharu, the newest green gold?

Agarwood is perhaps the most prized non-timber forest product traded in the international market. The establishment of forest species producing agarwood is gaining attention at national and local levels as the resources from the natural forest are depleting over the years.

Planters see this type of plantation as green ‘gold mine’ of the future, if there is a breakthrough in inoculation technology. Agarwood (also known as gaharu, aloes wood, eagle wood, oud, chen-xiang, kalambak among other common names) is a fragrant wood that has been traded for a long time for its use in religious, medicinal and aromatic preparation.

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Gaharu in Penang

GEORGE TOWN: “Gaharu man” Gurdial Singh has a mission in life protecting his playground by exposing poachers who chop down the precious agarwood trees.

“People told me that it is dangerous to be a whistleblower. But I can't sit still while poachers steal the wood,” he said.

The 52-year-old veteran Hash runner has been regularly tipping The Star off about the poachers, believed to be foreigners, since February.

“I felt swift action will only be taken after the matter is highlighted in the media. I'm not doing it for publicity,” he said.

Last month, he tipped off The Star and state Forestry Department after noticing that five trees had been chopped in a jungle near Taman Lembah Permai in Tanjung Bungah.

The department detained two Cambodian men and recovered gaharu wood estimated to be worth between RM100,000 and RM200,000.

Gaharu is used for medicine and perfume and fetches a handsome prize in the Middle East.

“My wife was initially upset that I had gone to the media. I want my two children and all children to grow up knowing the importance of the trees,” he said.

Gurdial, a factory general manager, said his “playground” was the forest as he has been blazing jungle trails with the Penang Hash House Harriers for more than two decades.

He has done hundreds of runs through forests in China, Hong Kong, Britain, Australia and Indonesia.

“Penang has the best hill trails. My favourite are the hills in Batu Ferringhi,” he said.

He started noticing that a certain type of tree was being chopped all over the island since 2010.

Knowing the local forests well, Gurdial knew felling was being carried out illegally on state land.

“At the time, I didn't know that it was the prized agarwood trees but I sensed something fishy.

“It wasn't until I stumbled upon the felling near the Penang Botanic Gardens last year that I realised the value of these trees and why they were being chopped,” he said.

The department formed two teams to track down those responsible for poaching in state forest reserves.

These days, the Hash network of about 80 runners are also on high alert for agarwood poachers.

Monday, December 10, 2012

8 Months After Field Planting

AAR clone 8 months after field planting

Gaharu trees near Penang Botanicals Garden

GEORGE TOWN: “Gaharu man” Gurdial Singh has a mission in life protecting his playground by exposing poachers who chop down the precious agarwood trees.

“People told me that it is dangerous to be a whistleblower. But I can't sit still while poachers steal the wood,” he said.

The 52-year-old veteran Hash runner has been regularly tipping The Star off about the poachers, believed to be foreigners, since February.

“I felt swift action will only be taken after the matter is highlighted in the media. I'm not doing it for publicity,” he said.

Last month, he tipped off The Star and state Forestry Department after noticing that five trees had been chopped in a jungle near Taman Lembah Permai in Tanjung Bungah.

The department detained two Cambodian men and recovered gaharu wood estimated to be worth between RM100,000 and RM200,000.

Gaharu is used for medicine and perfume and fetches a handsome prize in the Middle East.

“My wife was initially upset that I had gone to the media. I want my two children and all children to grow up knowing the importance of the trees,” he said.

Gurdial, a factory general manager, said his “playground” was the forest as he has been blazing jungle trails with the Penang Hash House Harriers for more than two decades.

He has done hundreds of runs through forests in China, Hong Kong, Britain, Australia and Indonesia.

“Penang has the best hill trails. My favourite are the hills in Batu Ferringhi,” he said.

He started noticing that a certain type of tree was being chopped all over the island since 2010.

Knowing the local forests well, Gurdial knew felling was being carried out illegally on state land.

“At the time, I didn't know that it was the prized agarwood trees but I sensed something fishy.

“It wasn't until I stumbled upon the felling near the Penang Botanic Gardens last year that I realised the value of these trees and why they were being chopped,” he said.

The department formed two teams to track down those responsible for poaching in state forest reserves.

These days, the Hash network of about 80 runners are also on high alert for agarwood poachers.

Saturday, December 1, 2012

Experience in Agarwood Production in Malaysia

A view of the gaharu plantation

AT a gaharu (agarwood) plantation owned by Gaharu Technologies Sdn Bhd in Gopeng, Perak, tourists come by the hundreds in chartered buses every day.

The 120 ha Gaharu Tea Valley Gopeng is the latest tourist attraction in Perak, and on hand to welcome the tourists personally most of the time is its owner David Ho Kwan Meng, who also owns Gaharu Technologies Sdn Bhd.

As he enjoys the good business brought by the visitors who pay RM10 each to tour his plantation besides buying the various gaharu products he produces and sells, Ho is grateful to two particular persons who had made it all possible - his Standard Four teacher, Pang Tau Siew and the generous Japanese man who gave him 200 special hybrid gaharu seedlings to plant.

Pang, who came from China, inspired young Ho to appreciate gaharu trees by telling him exotic stories about the agarwood and its value to the Chinese emperors.

The Japanese man gave Ho the special hybrid agarwood which became the mother trees for his plantation.

“I met the old man in 1992 while doing heavy machinery business.My supplier from Japan recommended me to him.

He was already 88 years old then.He came by taxi and brought the seedlings with him,” said Ho who also owns SSL Heavy Machinery Sdn Bhd.

Ho was overwhelmed when he saw the gaharu seedlings.

Immediately, he thought of his old Standard Four teacher, Mr Pang at SJK Jelapang in Kampung Jelapang, Ipoh and his stories about the Chinese emperors and agarwood.

“ I can still remember Mr Pang’s car plate number.I was a very quiet boy who listened when he talked.He was always telling us the history of China because he came from China,” said Ho.

Throughout the interview with New Sarawak Tribune, Ho did not name the Japanese man.But he said the man’s ancestors worked for the Chinese emperors long ago and that they lived in Akita, a prefecture in northern Japan after migrating from China.

Ho said in 1992, the Japanese man had at first approached public companies in Malaysia with his 200 trees.

However, although the CEOs of the companies liked the idea of planting gaharu trees for economic returns, their ideas were not accepted by their board members, accountants or auditors.

Public companies were keen on making fast money.They could not wait 15 years for the trees, he pointed out.

Ho said he met the Japanese man many times before the latter gave him the gaharu plants with three conditions.

“First, I can only plant the seeds after 15 years.Secondly, I cannot plant rubber, oil palms or other trees with the agarwood.

“Thirdly, the seedlings have to be planted with 100 per cent organic methods.So, I use earthworms to fertilise my trees.

“I was told if I did not follow the conditions, the raw materials that I would be sending to Japan would be rejected,” explained Ho.

He said he “controlled” the earthworms by using enzymes made from garlic and lemon grass.

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Gaharu Integration With Oil Palm

Two years old Gaharu tree planted in between oil palm treess.

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Commercial Gaharu Cultivation in Sarawak

Commercial cultivation of Gaharu in Sarawak is gaining momentum and contributes to the livelihood of the local communities.

Gaharu also known as agarwood, eaglewood or aloeswood is the name for resinous, fragrant and highly valuable heartwood produced by Aquilaria malaccensis and other species of the Indomalesian tree genus Aquilaria from the family of Thymeleaceae. It is among the most valuable tree species found in Sarawak in which at least three species were identified namely Aquilaria malaccensis, Aquilaria beccariana and Aquilaria microcarpa (Tawan, 2003). It is found in the plain hill slopes and ridges of up to 750m in both primary and secondary lowland dipterocarp forests.

Gaharu plays important roles in human lives. In Arab, many considered it as part of their culture and religion.

The high class of the Japanese society used it in the rituals of the Kod Doh, an incense appreciation ceremony. Both India and China had the legacy of Gaharu usage in their traditional medicine. In China, it is widely used to treat gastralgia, gastric ulcers, gastroptosis, kidney, liver and respiratory problems. It helped in blood circulation and had a complete antibiotic function against tubercle, typhoid and diarrhea bacillus.

The Chinese also used Gaharu for religious ceremonies, perfume, liquor and tea.

The European version of Gaharu is represented by the French perfume floracopia where the perfume brand “Yves Saint Laurent M7” is using Gaharu oil as its base or fixer to the other fragrance.

According to Forestry Department, Peninsular Malaysia, Gaharu prices in 2007 were RM25,000 per kg, RM20,000 per kg, RM18,000 per kg, RM15,000 per kg, RM8,000 per kg and RM3,000 per kg for super grade, grade A, grade B, grade C, grade D and grade E respectively. Prices for other grades were between RM500 – RM1,000 per kg. Prices of Gaharu chips on the other hand were between RM5 – RM100 per kg. Market survey conducted by the said department in 2007 revealed that Gaharu prices increased by at least five times in four years.

The cultivation of Aquilaria microcarpa and Aquilaria beccariana in Sarawak are in the form of in-situ mixed cropping (agrisilviculture) system, home-garden and ex-situ intercropping (mixture of timber and Aquilaria species). The earliest record of Aquilaria microcarpatree cultivation was back in early 1960s when the Kenyah community in Long Gang, Belaga involved themselves in collecting and trading of wild Gaharu. In order to conduct growth study, planting trial of 1.2 ha was done at Sabal Agroforestry Centre in April 2005. Mixed planting of Aquilaria microcarpa and Calophyllumtesymaniivar.

inophylloide (anti-HIV Bintangor species) were planted under a 22-year old Acacia mangium and old secondary forest vegetation. After six months, the first assessment was done where survival rate was 93.7 percent and another assessment was done in August 2007 where survival rate was 83 percent. At the same time, under the Community Forestry Project funded by the State Government (D60/06) poly-bags and other nursery supplies were distributed to the project participants in Long Bedian, Ulu Baram and an in-situ site in Uma Badeng, Asap, Belaga areas for them to collect Gaharu wild seedlings. As at March 2007, there are 9,742 standing Aquilaria microcarpa plants under cultivation recorded in Sarawak and another 18,000 plants are available at the nursery.

According to The Wildlife Protection Ordinance 1958 (Chapter 128) Amendment 1998, Second Schedule, CITES permit is required for Gaharu commercial cultivation, collection, propagation as well as import and export.

Gaharu from the species of Aquilaria malaccensis was listed under CITES Appendix II with annotation 1 since 17th February 1995 and thereafter it included other Aquilaria species since 17th February 2005. The Authority to issue CITES permit in Sarawak is the Forest Department.

Commercial cultivation of Gaharu in Sarawak is gaining momentum and contributes to the livelihood of the local communities. Gaharu was also proven to be a potential source of new genes as well as new products particularly drugs. Thus, it is valuable to the international agricultural and pharmaceutical industries.

Genecological zonation therefore should be done either using the agro-forestry or community forestry approach to conserve the genetic resources of Gaharu. The adoption of ethno-knowledge of the local communities and scientific approach are crucial in ensuring a brighter future of Gaharu.

via sarawaktimber.org.my

Friday, October 5, 2012

Report on Gaharu In Malaysia

Gaharu is being studied in Malaysia as a non-timber forest product that may facilitate sustainable economic development. Gaharu is a resinous compound formed in the inner wood of trees from Aquilaria and related species as a defense against disease (often fungi). It has been prized for millennia for the sublime aroma produced when Gaharu is burned or extracted into a perfume oil. Known around the world by various names – ood or oud in the Middle East, agarwood, aloes(wood) in the bible – this compound can command upwards of US$2,000 per kilogram in select markets such as Singapore, Saudi Arabia and Japan.

Spearheading research into cultivating Gaharu are Prof. Bob Blanchette and Joel Jurgens of the University of Minnesota Plant Pathology Department. Following a trip by Bob and Joel to Sabah in 2006, sponsored by the Alexander Abraham Foundation and facilitated by LEAP, a joint project in Gaharu cultivation technology was developed between the University of Minnesota and LEAP to train staff from MOSTI (Ministry of Science, Innovation and Technology) and FRIM (Forest Research Institute Malaysia), in Peninsular Malaysia, and Sabah Forestry Department, with MOSTI funding the costs for a three-year programme.

Field trials using Gaharu induced technology started in March 2007, in three sites in Malaysia: Sabah’s Sook Plain Forest Reserve, along with FRIM’s research plantation and Agency Nuclear Malaysia trees located in an old rubber plantation, both in Peninsular Malaysia.

A year after the start of the trials, one tree was cut at each of the three sites and evaluated. Excitingly, all the trees harvested were found to have produced Gaharu in varying amounts and concentration. The remaining trees were treated again during this visit, to maximize the amount of Gaharu produced per tree.

LEAP then facilitated the second harvest in December 2008 when Bob and Joel returned to Sabah and Peninsular Malaysia on the final phase of the programme, to cut and evaluate several trees from each site.

Meanwhile, DNA profiles of Sabah’s Gaharu trees which were originally believed to beAquilaria malaccensis were found to match more closely A. beccariana or A. macrocarpa, the former producing some of the highest grade Gaharu in the world. Further studies are being carried out to better understand all the Gaharu species growing in Sabah.



The final evaluations from the trees harvested confirm that Gaharu resin began to form after only 12 months and significant amounts were produced after 20 months. Trees with more treatment sites had greater quantities and higher quality of Gaharu and it appears that Gaharu production could be optimized by more treatment at the start, or further treatment of existing trees.

LEAP looks forward to extending the work with Bob and Joel including the interesting possibility of women from PWET (Project Women Empowerment Trees), who have planted Gaharu seedlings in their villages, visiting a successful microenterprise scheme in Vietnam where Gaharu is being cultivated and products marketed internationally.

The future hope is to use this innovative yet relatively simple technology to work with indigenous communities to create an alternative means of income generation from their land.

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Gaharu

Gaharu product in Sarawak

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Gaharu Plant Integration With Oil Palm Trees

Gaharu or Agarwood (or just Agar) is the resinous heartwood from Aquilaria trees, large evergreens native to southeast Asia. The trees occasionally become infected with mold and begin to produce an aromatic resin in response to this attack. As the infection grows, it results in a very rich, dark resin within the heartwood.

The resin is commonly called gaharu, jinko, aloeswood, agarwood, pokok karas or oud (not to be confused with 'Bakhoor') and is valued in many cultures for its distinctive fragrance, and thus is used for incense and perfumes.

Friday, August 10, 2012

Gaharu in Penang


GEORGE TOWN: The gaharu (agarwood) resin, whose oil extract is much sought after in the Middle East, can fetch lucrative prices of up to RM20,000 per kg, according to a university academician.

The oil extract taken from the resin produced from the aquilaria malaccensis tree, would cost several thousands of ringgit, depending on its grade and quality, said Universiti Sains Malaysia’s School of Biological Sciences lecturer Prof Baharuddin Salleh.

“Why is it expensive? I’m not able to answer that.

“It is the same when people ask why gold is expensive,” he said yesterday.

He added that the oil extract was usually used in perfumes, medicines and sometimes by wealthy Arabs to wash their clothes and linen.

“Other parts of the tree have its uses as well – the leaves are used in drinking tea and the remnants of the wood are used to make joss sticks,” he said, adding that the Middle Eastern countries imported gaharu oil and the wood mainly from Vietnam, Thailand, Myanmar, Indonesia as well as some from Malaysia.

Baharuddin was responding to a series of reports in The Star regarding the illegal felling of gaharu trees in Penang, the latest incident being at Gambier Hill.

This was despite the state government’s declaration of a crackdown against the thieves.

Local syndicates with foreign connections were allegedly felling the highly-valued gaharu trees in the rainforest near the Botanic Gardens as well as several other areas.

Penang Health, Welfare, Caring Society and Environment Committee chairman Phee Boon Poh had said that there would be joint operations with the police to tackle the situation, as it was a serious matter.

Baharuddin said the aquilaria malaccensis tree was widely available in Malaysia, but there was a lack of awareness about its potential.

“Malaysia is actually behind other neighbouring countries which are more advanced in the gaharu industry.

“There are not many gaharu plantations in Malaysia as it is still in the early stages, but the future of gaharu is bright,” he said.

Penang MACC director Datuk M. Samarajoo said they would initiate investigations if there was information or report on corruption (related to the illegal felling).

Sunday, July 29, 2012

There’s money in ‘karas’ tree


SIBU: Most Sarawakians lack proper knowledge and skills to plant ‘karas’ tree and the production of ‘gaharu’, a valuable commodity.

Assistant Minister in the Chief Minister’s Department (Bumiputera Entrepreneur Development) Datuk Mohd Naroden Majais reckoned that the three-day basic ‘karas’ planting course (gaharu industry) would thus help bridge the knowledge gap.

The course would also be good for the development of entrepreneurs, in particular Bumiputera, in the state.
‘Gaharu’ product was traditionally produced from the stem of a tree, but could now be scientifically churned out, he pointed out.

“The course is intended to expose entrepreneurs and those keen to venture into planting
of ‘karas’ towards a more scientific way of forest plantation, making them more knowledgeable about it.
“The reason being that not many people really have knowledge and skills relating to planting of ‘karas’ tree and producing ‘gaharu’ despite it not being something new to Sarawak.

“The role of ‘karas’ forest plantation is attracting more attention from the government as being a potential sector in substantiating non wood-based industry such as ‘gaharu’ and its oil,” Naroden said when officiating at the closing of the three-day course for Sibu division here on Friday.

His text-of-speech was read out by Jemoreng assemblyman Abu Seman Jahwie.

Forest Research Institute Malaysia (Frim) research officer Dr Lok Eng Hai, in his presentation earlier, told the 45 participants that ‘gaharu’, owing to its lucrative price and high international demand, had been labelled as ‘black gold’ in the market.

Naroden said success stories from a neighbouring country were often heard, attributing this to the hard work by the government and researchers.
He revealed that the field of forest plantation had grown, not only in terms of opening up plantation for planting of timber but also for non wood-based products like ‘gaharu’.

The product had come under the control of Cites (Convention of International Treaty on Endangered Species) to ensure that it is not depleted.
“To protect species from the forest facing threats of extinction, replanting programmes through forest plantation had been initiated as among measures to preserve and conserve them besides generating lucrative side income.

“In this connection, the programme carried out is a noble effort of the state government to assist the country and ‘karas’ plantation operators to manage the species in a holistic manner.”
To that end, he urged the participants, from Kuching, Sarikei, Kapit and Sibu, to apply the knowledge gained and not leave them on the ‘shelf’.
“My advice is that you need to equip yourselves with skills to avoid being left behind in the government’s development and transformation programmes.”

Matnor Abang, assistant director of Bumiputera entrepreneur development unit in the Chief Minister Department and Sibu Resident Sim Kok Kee were among those present.


Read more: http://www.theborneopost.com/2012/05/13/theres-money-in-karas-tree-gaharu-naroden/#ixzz220WQf6xD

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Gaharu integration with Oil Palm

Try this venture, according to source, it can be done. Fungus injection when the tree reach 5 years. On the 10th years hopefully the Gaharu tree is ready for harvesting.

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Gaharu Shop In Sarawak

The Agarwood Shop-Very impressive
The Gaharu Oil