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Little-known nut helps Maluku farmers build sustainable forest economy

Village-owned enterprises help earn income without cutting trees

Harry Jacques (Thomson Reuters Foundation) (The Jakarta Post)
Makian Island, North Maluku
Tue, November 23, 2021

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Little-known nut helps Maluku farmers build sustainable forest economy

F

armer Musdi Siraju, 19, picked his way down the steep, slippery mountainside in bare feet, on his way to the grove of coconut palms, canarium and nutmeg trees where he works every day to support his family in Makian Island, North Maluku.

In 1512, colonial Portuguese traders, followed later by the Dutch and the English, descended on Makian and the other Maluku islands to exploit their rich natural resources, particularly spices.

Today, people in Musdi's home village of Sebelei are earning more from what grows here under an emerging economic model the government hopes can boost rural livelihoods while safeguarding natural landscapes.

Through an enterprise set up by the village authorities, residents are harvesting and selling kenari – mineral-rich nuts that grow from century-old trees some 30 meters high.

"Back then, they came to take spices with violence," said village head Samiun Asari, 60. "Today we have self-determination."

The kenari nut, also known as pili, is versatile. Islanders eat it raw, blend it with sugar, bake it and add it to coffee, among other uses.

Until recently, it was traded only locally as a food staple, keeping prices low for hundreds of farmers like Musdi.

But since 2019, a partnership with Jakarta-based food company Timurasa Indonesia has allowed the farmers to increase production and spur demand for the little-known forest product.

"Very few people [even] in Indonesia know about the kenari nut," said Timurasa cofounder Erdi Rulianto.

The enterprise kicked into a higher gear in August, when Timurasa put in an order for 500 kilograms, its largest yet.

Erdi hopes to start exporting kenari nuts to Europe starting next year. "People think of almonds and cashews, but this product is overlooked," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

 

Model villages

More than one in four rural people in eastern Indonesia live in poverty, government data shows.

That means many young people in the Maluku Islands see migration as the route out of subsistence, Samiun said.

In the last two years, the village head has signed papers to change the domiciles of more than 50 young inhabitants to allow them to take up work elsewhere.

"They go, but with a heavy heart," he said.

Last year, Indonesia recorded its first recession since 1998 as the COVID-19 pandemic saw unemployment surge and pushed the poverty rate above 10 percent for the first time since 2017.

Under the National Medium-Term Development Plan (RPJMN), the government wants to reduce poverty to 7 percent by 2024.

As part of that effort, it aims to establish about 75,000 village-owned enterprises like the one in Sebelei over the next three years, said Dani Usadi, who specializes in high-value products at the Villages, Disadvantaged Regions and Transmigration Ministry.

So far, about 42,000 have been set up, Dani noted.

The Sebelei project includes funding for six small greenhouses, where kenari nuts stacked on aluminum trays dry in a day or two – faster and better than the traditional method of leaving them on the roadside.

The nuts are then loaded onto boats bound for Ternate, from where they are flown to Jakarta to be packaged into retail products.

Wastage due to moisture in transit has halved since the greenhouses began operating, while a planned shift from air freight to shipping containers could cut logistics costs by 60 percent, said Erdi at Timurasa.

Hardy Yasim, another member of the village-owned business in Sebelei, said the project would enable his family to afford books and uniforms when his children started school.

Last year, Hardy earned about Rp 500,000 (US$35) per month on average, but he hopes efforts to stock kenari on shelves further afield could see that rise to Rp 2 million.

"We will be more secure," he said.

 

Government support

Driven largely by the expansion of oil palm and mining permits, North Maluku province has lost nearly 7 percent of its old-growth trees in the last two decades, according to the Global Forest Watch monitoring service.

Tropical forests play a vital role in slowing climate heating, storing 250 billion tons of planet-heating carbon in their trees alone – equivalent to 90 years of global fossil-fuel emissions at current levels, according to a 2020 study published in the journal Nature.

Forestry scientists say low productivity among small-scale farmers growing everything from oil palm to coffee means many have had to clear land to earn enough for their daily needs.

But as projects like that in Sebelei boost incomes, they could also ease pressure on forests in some areas – with proper government support, said Ani Adiwinata Nawir, a scientist at the Center for International Forestry Research.

Ani, who has worked with village enterprises in eastern Indonesia, said communities also needed more access to extension services, business training and post-harvest technology.

That would allow farmers to improve yields from existing trees rather than opening up new land to plant more, she said.

It is too early to know how successful Indonesia's sustainable forest economy plan will be longer term, but the extra income has already helped Musdi keep his family together.

He had been planning to leave home to seek work, until his father died last year and he knew he would have to stay to support his mother and two younger siblings.

The village enterprise made that decision easier, he said.

"After [it] started, I didn't have the desire to leave anymore," he said.

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