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 Growing and processing
rubber is an important economic sector of
Vietnam.
 Cultivating the rubber
saplings.
 MA Luu Thanh That (white shirt) and the
students of the Rubber Industrial College in Dong Xoai, Binh
Duong Province during the practical lesson on rubber bud
transplant.
 Exploiting latex at Phu Rieng
Farm.
 Analysing the waste water from the latex
processing plant at Tay Ninh Rubber Joint-Stock
Company.
 Collecting latex at the forests to transport
to Phu Rieng Company.
 A system of centrifuges for producing high
quality latex at Phu Rieng Company.
 Producing the force-resistant rubber conveyor
belts at Ben Thanh Joint-Stock Company in Ho Chi Minh City
to provide for the sectors of exploiting coal, stone and sand
and producing fertilizer and cement.
 Preparing the rubber product to put into
pressing.
 Old rubber trees are used to make household
utensils and furniture.
 Waste water treatment system using
micro-organism technology at Tay Ninh Rubber Joint-Stock
Company.
 A device for specifying the pollution in the
waste water from the rubber processing
plant.
| The main component of the rubber tree is latex, also called “white
gold”, because it is an essential material for many technologies. There
isn’t a day that passes that we don’t have contact with products made of
rubber in our daily activities.
When the
country was reunified in 1975 the total area of rubber trees was only
47,000ha. Most of the rubber trees were old, many factories had been
devastated and the machines were damaged and obsolete. The Government had
plans to restore and develop the rubber sector which has experienced great
changes since the Vietnam Rubber Corporation was established in 1995 (in
April 2007 the Vietnam Rubber Corporation became the Vietnam Rubber
Industry Group). Particularly, the shifting to the market economy has
attracted other economic sectors to invest in rubber trees. The rubber
sector has become one of the spearhead industries in the national economy,
with different forms of businesses, including State-owned (great
landowner), local and military rubber companies; joint-venture companies;
joint-stock companies and small rubber farms established by
individuals.
On its path of development, the Vietnamese rubber
sector has paid attention to and made appropriate investment in human
resource training. In 1978, the
Rubber
Mechanical
Worker
School
was established. In January,
2008 it became the
Rubber
Industrial
College
and now the
College trains 3,500 students a year in 20 related occupations.
Specialized
scientists at the Vietnam Rubber Research Institute in
Binh
Duong
Province
have studied and
dealt with issues relating to rubber trees, including new strains, soil
classification, farming technique and modern technology in exploiting and
processing the latex. Particularly, in recent years, the Institute has
undertaken many projects on waste water treatment and provided advice for
the processing plants to build standard treatment systems. Additionally,
it has implemented international programmes on producing the products of
high economic value.
After many
ups and downs, Vietnamese rubber trees have become an important basis for
many solutions on hunger elimination and poverty reduction, ecological
environment protection and social security.
Progressing with the “white
gold”
The main
component of the rubber tree is latex, also called “white gold”, because
it is an essential material for many technologies. There isn’t a day that
passes that we don’t have contact with products made of rubber in our
daily activities.
Few people
remember the old verses about the wretched life of the mistreated workers
at the rubber plantations in the past. Now, coming to the plantations or
processing plants, visitors will see brilliant faces of young healthy
workers. Over the past two years, they have had an average monthly income
of 4-5 million VND. At some companies, for example Tay Ninh Rubber Company
and Phu Rieng Rubber Company, the workers have an income of over six
million VND. Nguyen Hoa Lap at Group 1 of Go Dau Farm in Tay Ninh said
happily: “My wife and I are rubber workers and we earn over 10 million VND
a month”. Many families of workers have three motorbikes, including two
motorbikes for the couple to go to work and a new stylist motorbike for
travel on holidays. Some families have cars. The production and trade
efficiency of the companies have increased steadily, helping improve
considerably the welfare of workers. Social assurance, health assurance,
sports and artistic activities are maintained regularly, helping stabilize
the spiritual and material life of the workers.
The development
of rubber trees at small plantations has gradually reduced the
difficulties facing many families of ethnic people in sparse and remote
areas and brought a better, even affluent life for the locals. With only a
small number of hectares of rubber trees for exploiting latex, the ethnic
people can earn hundreds of millions of VND a year by selling the latex to
the big companies. The most impressive story is about billionaire A-ma Ben
in Dak Lak. Possessing 85ha of rubber trees, his family earns an average
income of 1.5 billion a year. He has created jobs for 57 people, helped 30
households get out of poverty and donated 60 million VND to the local
authority and 640m2 of land for building
community houses.
Apart from
latex, old rubber trees, which are cut down for reforestation, also yield
a considerable income. In the past, rubber timber was used as firewood or
for making packages. Now it is a precious source of material to produce
household utensils and furniture, especially at a time when other species
of woods are becoming exhausted. Every year, rubber timber-processing
companies earn hundreds of billions of VND, creating jobs for tens of
thousands of labourers. Rubber trees are useful in protecting the
environment, covering the bare land, fighting against erosion, protecting
and maintaining the humidity of the soil and shielding the ecological
areas. When the trees shed their leaves, the floor of the rubber forest is
covered with a thick layer of leaves, creating a valuable source of
organic substance for the soil. Under the canopy of rubber trees, cows and
goats are reared, yielding considerable revenue.
Looking to the future
General Director
of the Vietnam Rubber Industry Group Le Quang Thung said: “The focus of
the Group in the coming years is to grow and re-cultivate 42,000ha of
rubber trees, including 12,000ha in Tay Bac, 10,000ha in Tay Nguyen (the
Central Highlands), 10,000ha in
Laos and 10,000ha in
Cambodia
.
The Group strives to increase its plantation’s productivity to two
tonnes/ha by 2010. Under its development strategy for 2010, it will build
a structure of products, including industrial, agricultural and service
products, with rubber as the main product, promote the processing industry
and reduce gradually the ratio of exported rubber material. By 2015, the
Group will manage directly 500,000ha of rubber trees (at home and abroad)
and develop other multi-purpose areas, with the aim of fully tapping the
existing source of materials, increasing the value of products and other
advantages”. In reality,
Vietnam
is reducing the ratio
of exported rubber as raw material and increasing the products used in the
industries and civil services. The products of Ben Thanh Joint-Stock
Company in
Ho Chi Minh City
,
such as the force-resistant conveyor belts, driving belts and others earn
the company hundreds of billions of VND a year. Many companies inside and
outside the Group have made great investment in producing tyres of
different categories, sport and medical appliances, etc….
Nguyen
Hong Phu, Director of Phu Rieng Company, a strong unit in the Group said:
“During the process of development, the Group’s member companies always
invest in infrastructure development, creating a new model of modernizing
the agriculture in rural areas, forming the socio-economic centres, towns
and communal streets in the locality, creating jobs and improving the life
of local people, especially ethnic people in remote and border areas. The
development of the rubber trees not only serves the socio-economic targets
but also has political, security and defence significance”.
His words
can be considered as a complete assessment on the potential and prospect
of the Vietnamese rubber sector in national renovation process.
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 Producing utensils from
rubber tree wood at Minh Duong Company in Binh Duong
Province.
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