Laos:
Vietnamese companies set up rubber plantations in the south
In July 2004, a business
delegation from the Vietnam General Rubber Corporation visited
Laos. At the time only a small area was planted with rubber in
the south of Laos. “We can provide 50,000-100,000 hectares
of land for Vietnam to grow rubber,” Thongloun Sisolit, the Lao
Deputy Prime Minister, told the delegation.
A few months later, the Lao government
licensed a US$30 million project by the Dac Lac Rubber Company,
a Vietnamese state-owned company. The Dac Lac Rubber Company is
named after a province in the central highlands of Vietnam where
the company has 14,000 hectares of rubber plantations. The company
aims to plant 10,000 hectares with rubber trees in Champasak,
Saravane, Sekong and Attopeu provinces, on a 50-year land lease.
By October 2006, the company had planted 3,200 hectares with rubber
trees.
The Vietnam Economic Times reported
Thongloun Sisolit as describing the company’s project as “a model
to help his people gear up for commercial production”.
But Dac Lac Rubber Company has replaced
forests and villagers’ land with rubber plantations. The company
paid compensation where it cleared cash crops, but provided no
compensation where it cleared farmers’ upland rice fields. Before
the company established its rubber plantations, much of the land
was a mixture of rice fields, fallows and forest. The company
simply declared it “degraded forest” and cleared the land.
In March 2005, another Vietnamese company
started operations in Champasak province. The Viet Nam-Laos Rubber
Joint Stock Company plans to plant 10,000 hectares of rubber trees
with a total investment of US$30 million. The company pays a rent
of US$9 per hectare per year to the Lao government. The company
is part of the Vietnam General Rubber Corporation.
In December 2006, the Quang Minh Rubber
Production Joint Stock Company signed a contract with the Lao
Planning and Investment Committee, for a US$15 million project
to plant 4,900 hectares of rubber plantations in Sekong and Attopeu
provinces.
Last month, World Rainforest Movement
was in Laos and visited one of the Viet Nam-Laos Rubber Joint
Stock Company’s plantation areas near Mak Ngeo village in Champasak
province. A sign in the plantation forbids cattle grazing. One
side of the dirt track had been fairly recently planted. The red
soil and rows of metre-high rubber trees stretched away into the
distance. Beyond the plantation we could see the remains of the
forest that had been cleared to make way for the rubber trees.
On the other side of the track the rubber trees were older and
more than two metres high. Four Lao villagers were clearing grass
and small shrubs from around the trees. The villagers told us
that they had lost their land to the company. Working together
they could clear about 150 metres a day, sometimes more, sometimes
less, depending on how bad the weeds were. The company paid them
50,000 kip (about US$5.25) for each 150 metres distance that they
cleared, so they each received a little over US$1 a day.
About 200 Vietnamese workers are employed
here. While we were there two Vietnamese workers arrived on a
motorbike. One of them spoke Lao and started instructing the workers.
He'd been in Laos for about a year.
A little further up the road, we saw
a rubber tree nursery. Cuttings from rubber trees are planted
in compost in small plastic bags. Once the cuttings sprout leaves
and roots they can be planted out. The cuttings came from Vietnam.
A few years ago,
a Malaysian oil palm company set up a trial plantation nearby.
Today the plantation is neglected and overgrown. Near the oil
palm plantation is a newly cleared rubber plantation, surrounded
by a fence and a ditch to keep out cattle.
In May 2006, at a workshop on “Rubber
Development in Laos” held in Vientiane, Sounthone Ketphanh, Deputy
Director of the Lao Forest Research Centre, explained that market
demand for rubber in China had encouraged investments from Chinese
and Vietnamese companies in rubber plantations in Laos. The Chinese
investments are in the north of the country and the Vietnamese
in the south.
According to a report in the Vientiane
Times, Sounthone described the benefits of rubber plantations:
“Unlike other cash crops, rubber offers long-term benefits to
farmers for a period of 30-40 years. Farmers not only benefit
from tapping latex but also from intercropping in the first few
years after planting and from selling the timber when tapping
comes to an end.”
Participants at the meeting noted that
the price of rubber on the world market follows “boom and bust”
cycles, which could spell disaster for companies and farmers growing
rubber trees on their land. Since May 2006, the price of rubber
has plunged, although analysts are predicting that it will recover.
Southone acknowledged another problem.
“On the downside,” he told the workshop in Vientiane, “the rapid
growth of rubber plantations causes large-scale loss of forest
resources and watershed destruction, which is particularly important
in Laos where rural food security is directly related to forest
heath.”
By Chris Lang, e-mail: http://chrislang.org,
www.chrislang.blogspot.com