Melinda Firds Program Management Unit Assistant
World Agroforestry (ICRAF)
Jl. CIFOR, Situ Gede, Sindang Barang,
Bogor Barat - Indonesia 16115
Tel: +62 2511 8625415
Fax: +62 2511 8625416
Email: icrafseapub@cgiar.org
Strategy for value creation: Intermediaries of smallholding teak in lndonesia
Author
Aulia Perdana and James M Roshetko
Year
2013
Parent Title
Proceedings Future Direction of Small-scale and Community-based Forestry, September 8-13, 2013, Fukuoka, Japan
Publisher
IUFRO
City of Publication
Fukuoka, Japan
Pages
356-366
Call Number
PP0345-14
Abstract:
Commercially traded smallholder timber, particularly teak, in developing countries have been
challenged with the unremitting problem of low returns (Carsan and Holding 2006, Midgley et a1 2007,
Aoudji et a1 2012, Sabastian et a1 2012, Rohadi et a1 2012). For Indonesian smallholder teak, it is due to
low tree quality standards (Roshetko 2012)) unfavourable policies (Rohadi et al 2012)) lacking
accessible market information, weak bargaining power, and high transaction costs (Midgley et a1 2007,
Perdana et al 2012).
In Indonesia, most teak plantations are on Java, where the largest grower, Perum Perhutani, a
state-owned forest enterprise, manages 2,442,101 ha of teak plantation (Perhutani 2010). In addition
to Perum Perhutani, there are approximately 1.2 million ha of smallholders' plantations in lndonesia
that primarily produce teak (Nawir et al. 2007). Smallholding plantations rarely use improved
germplasm or benefit from silvicultural management such as fertilizer application, weeding, thinning
and pruning. Smallholders' teak is different from long-rotation industrial plantations that benefit from
professional management, smallholders' logs are shorter, have smaller diameter, less clear wood, more
knots, and obtain lower prices (Roshetko and Manurung 2009). Despite these shortcomings,
smallholding teak plantations are an important source of wood for many teak manufacturers and
retailers in Indonesia.
Download file(s):Click icon to download/open file.