The Borneo Post

MPOB to propose incentives to woo youths to plantation industry

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PETALING JAYA: The Malaysian Palm Oil Board ( MPOB) is currently working on a proposal to incentivis­e Malaysians, especially the youths, to join the plantation industry – a move that will help to reduce the country’s dependency on foreign labour, chairman Datuk Ahmad Jazlan Yaakub said.

He said the board plans to provide the incentives to students enrolled at the Malaysian Palm Oil Training Centre ( PLASMA).

“Maybe Malaysians assume that the minimum wage in the country is still small, thus they are not that interested to take part in the industry.

“This is why Malaysia, being the world’s second largest oil palm producer, has to rely on foreign workers,” he said during his visit to Orion Biosains Sdn Bhd’s laboratory here yesterday.

Currently, workers from Indonesia and Bangladesh account for about 70 per cent of the local plantation industry’s manpower.

“An action plan must be establishe­d so that Malaysia can reduce its dependency on foreign labour without resulting in a drastic contractio­n in the sector,” Ahmad Jazlan said.

Meanwhile, MPOB said through its collaborat­ion with Orion Biosains, it has successful­ly applied the SureSawit deoxyribon­ucleic acid ( DNA)-based screening technology to trace low-yielding non-tenera palms before the seeds are planted. — Bernama

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