Jamaica Gleaner

Efforts ongoing to ensure that Ja benefits from bamboo industry

-

DR OMER Thomas Senior Adviser to the minister without portfolio, in the Ministry of Industry, Commerce, Agricultur­e and Fisheries, Hon J.C. Hutchinson, says efforts are ongoing to ensure that Jamaica reap maximum returns from the bamboo industry.

“We are at point now where we can say that we are observing tangible results from the effort. What the bamboo can do for Jamaica, we have not heard the half, especially with the stridency in eliminatin­g plastic and styrofoam. Bamboo offers that potential to solving the problem,” Dr Thomas said.

He was speaking at a seminar on bamboo leaves, held on January 16, at the Bureau of Standards Jamaica (BSJ), in St Andrew.

Dr Thomas informed that the Government has enacted policies for the use of bamboo in both industrial developmen­t and agricultur­al production.

“The Government has rearranged the Rural Agricultur­al Developmen­t Authority (RADA) so that there would be a unit led by a specialist officer for industrial crops, so that bamboo will have the technical leadership. Those are significan­t steps to support the developmen­t of any fledling industry,” he said.

In recent years, innovation­s in bamboo processing have seen bamboo becoming a legally approved building material across the Andean countries of Colombia, Ecuador and Peru.

In addition, industrial developmen­t in Asia has resulted in domestic bamboo sectors in countries such as India and

China growing in value to US$4 billion and US$32 billion, respective­ly.

Meanwhile, the Bamboo in Constructi­on Working Group has developed a concept paper for the improvemen­t of the Holland Bamboo Grove in St Elizabeth, using the standards developed by the Bamboo Products Standards Technical Committee of the BSJ.

Holland Bamboo (also known as Bamboo Avenue) is a heritage site and one of Jamaica’s tourist attraction­s, which is said to be the most photograph­ed place in the island.

In 2012, Jamaica became the 38th member of the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Bamboo and Rattan in 2012. The group now has 42 members.

BAMBOO PRODUCTS

The country has also developed bamboo charcoal and charcoal products, bamboo pulp, paper, packaging materials and textiles, bamboo building and furniture production.

Jamaica has also exported over 85,000 pounds of bamboo charcoal to the United States, the Cayman Islands and St Maarten.

In addition, Jamaica has establishe­d some 14 prototypes for various bamboo by-products, including a charcoal kiln, charcoal for cooking purposes, charcoal water filter, lumber, ketchup, stylus for smartphone­s and tablet computers, body wash, soaps, and stretcher for the carrying sick.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica