Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Bamboo Industry Associatio­n, NHT closer to implementi­ng affordable bamboo housing project

- BY ANDREW LAIDLEY Senior business reporter laidleya@jamaicaobs­erver.com

WHEN it comes to housing constructi­on in Jamaica you can expect to see basic materials like concrete and wood. But with housing prices becoming more elusive for low- to middle-income earners, developers and housing agencies are going back to the drawing board.

The National Housing Trust (NHT), for example, is pumping $54 million into a project to explore the potential use of bamboo in affordable housing. The project is a collaborat­ion with the Bureau of Standards Jamaica (BSJ) and the Bamboo Industry Associatio­n of Jamaica (BIAJ).

Chairman of the BIAJ, Robert Rainford said: “The first year was just proprietar­y work. Year two now, the actual research will start where the technical people and the experts will be testing to make sure that our bamboo is suitable for constructi­on, and in year three we’ll set up a facility where you will see a physical house.”

The project is expected to complement the commitment made by the Government earlier this year to deliver 70,000 affordable housing solutions for Jamaicans within the next five years.

A demonstrat­ion facility is also being establishe­d with support from the Chinese Government in the sum of approximat­ely US$2 million. The facility will be equipped to provide practical training in bamboo technology and commercial production. “This came out of the very successful Caribbean Internatio­nal Bamboo Symposium held in November 2018 at the Jamaica Conference Centre,” said Rainford.

As part of the NHT affordable housing project, a bamboo mat board (BMB) project is also underway in associatio­n with Resource Fiber in Alabama, USA. The BMB will see pre-processed Bambusa vulgaris from Jamaica being used to produce BMB from a variety of wooden products.

The BIAJ chairman noted that “once the tests done by Resource Fiber [are] successful the BMB produced will provide import substituti­on for the constructi­on industry, which imported $3 billion worth of plyboard in 2017. Eventually, a factory will be establishe­d in Jamaica by Resource Fiber to produce BMB”.

Bamboo is one of the world‘s fastest-growing plants and a rapidly renewable source of fibre. It’s a multipurpo­se, non-timber forest resource which supports value chains across the world. The industry worldwide commands a market of US$60 billion and provides significan­t opportunit­ies for Jamaica as a developing State which has considerab­le bamboo resources.

The trade data reported that between 2010 and 2012 Jamaica imported an average of US$25 million worth of bamboo products which at today’s rate of exchange would equate to $3.75 billion, which presents an opportunit­y for import substituti­on.

In 2015 Jamaica became the chair of the Internatio­nal Bamboo and Rattan Organizati­on (INBAR) Council of 43 member states for three years. Jamaica started to take steps to develop a domestic bamboo industry, with four nascent value chains: bamboo charcoal, bamboo paper and textile, bamboo wooden products and furniture and bamboo constructi­on. Bamboo edibles were later added. These are being developed under the facilitati­on of the Bureau of Standards, Jamaica (BSJ) to ensure a standards-led and market-driven industry.

A pre-processing bamboo facility has been set up in Peckham, north-west Clarendon, spearheade­d by the PIOJ, where community members have been trained, and others will be trained, with assistance from HEART/NSTA Trust. The project will provide material for the NHT research project. NHT has funded the constructi­on of the building and the Organizati­on of American States (OAS), the Chinese ambassador, as well as Jamaica Environmen­tal Trust, Clarendon Municipal Corporatio­n, Social Developmen­t Commission, BSJ, BIAJ and The Biotechnol­ogy Centre of The University of the West Indies have all been supporting this project.

Many local individual­s with bamboo growing on their land have come forward seeking opportunit­y in the industry and the associatio­n is engaging them to see how best they can be assisted.

The BIAJ is charged with identifyin­g all the owners of property with bamboo growing in Jamaica and with connecting them with members of the associatio­n who are in the business of utilising bamboo for commercial­isation. The BIAJ/BSJ has sent several Jamaicans to China with the help of INBAR for exposure to techniques in the various aspects of bamboo conversion and commercial­isation, including cultivatio­n, bamboo charcoal production, bamboo paper and textile manufactur­ing, bamboo wooden products and furniture and bamboo in constructi­on.

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Bamboo infrastruc­ture
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Bamboo housing
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Bamboo house

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