|
Durian Tops Brunei's Fruit Import
By Azlan Othman
Bandar Seri
Begawan - Bruneians' love for durian has showed up in
numbers.
White durian was the top import
among fruits to the Sultanate last year worth $1.39 million. The
amount of white durian imported to Brunei stood at 606 metric tonnes
followed by mango at 328.1 mt ($1.15 million) and banana at 1875.7
mt ($1.10 million), figures obtained from the Agriculture Department
showed.
The amount of import stood at
14,322.2 mt (76.6 per cent) and most of them were tropical fruits.
All imported fruits could be planted in Brunei, which has more than
ample land to grow them. Brunei has 2,258.12 ha of land on which the
crops are planted by nearly 2,400 farmers.
However on the upside, the
percentage of import has dropped from 15,601 mt in 2005 to 14, 322
mt last year.
Brunei's per capita fruits
consumption is 55 kg per year with the demand for local fruits put
at 70 per cent.
Brunei is expected to achieve 100
per cent self-sufficiency in tropical fruits in 2023 with an
expected production of 24,649 mt from 6,162 hectares of land. The
local need for fruits is expected to reach 34,700 mt in 2023 and
tropical fruits alone at 24,200 mt.
Other fruits imported including
from Sabah and Sarawak are milk melon $0.85 million (532.1 mt),
watermelon $0.83 million (1413.7 mt), lime, $0.45 million (258.6 mt),
pineapple $0.28 million (321.1 mt), young coconut $0.27 million
(1084.6 mt), old coconut $0.24 million (402 mt), water guava $0.24
million (51 mt), yellow durian $0.23 million (115.2 mt) and papaya
$0.21 million (357 mt).
Brunei has produced $1.41 million
worth of sweet orange, $1.12 million durian, $1.08 million lime,
$1.07 million banana, $0.30 million rambutan, $0.29 million jack
fruit, $0.26 million Limau Kapas, $0.19 million guava, $0.17 million
papaya, and `Tarap' and water melon both at $0.16 million. Brunei
achieved 43 per cent self-sufficiency in tropical fruits last year,
two per cent more than targeted.
The Agriculture Department provides
basic assistance to farmers including land lease at a low rate of
$25 per hectare annually and provision of basic infrastructure and
utilities, besides 50 per cent subsidised manure, pesticides, water
pump and seedlings.
The department has highlighted
several programmes to cultivate more fruits such as enhancing
infrastructure such as roads and water supply, production technology
and management, introducing farm accreditation programmes, crop
protection programmes, enhancing crop quarantine, soil fertility
programme, incentive programmes, local fruits planting campaign and
developmental programmes for staff and farmers.
-- Courtesy of Borneo
Bulletin
Click
Here To Have Your Say On This Story
Brudirect.com News
|