APPLICATIONS may be submitted to cultivate bamboo on more than 66,000 acres of vacant, fallow, and virgin land across six districts in the Ayeyawady Region, according to Daw May Than Oo, Ayeyawady Region Minister for Natural Resources and Environmental Conservation.
Daw May Than Oo stated that applicants seeking to cultivate bamboo in the Ayeyawady Region may apply for permits on 29,000 acres of vacant, fallow, and virgin land in Pathein District, 10,996 acres in Kyonpyaw District, 4,850 acres in Myanaung District, 12,721 acres in Maubin District, 1,661 acres in Pyapon District, and 6,771 acres in Labutta District, totalling 66,671 acres across the region. She added that the Forest Department is granting permits for bamboo cultivation on these lands and that applications for the designated areas may be processed in accordance with the Vacant, Fallow and Virgin Lands Management Law.
To develop the country’s bamboo-based industry, a continuous supply of quality bamboo raw materials is required. As it has become necessary to establish bamboo plantations and harvest bamboo systematically in addition to sourcing it from natural forests, the Forest Department has been permitting the establishment of private bamboo plantations in reserved forests and protected public forests across Nay Pyi Taw and various regions and states since 2017. The department has established step-by-step procedures for reviewing and approving applications for private bamboo plantations. As of July 2022, a total of 136 entrepreneurs in seven states and regions had been granted permission to establish private bamboo plantations. Of the 6,081.5 acres approved, 4,191.5 acres had been planted, 1,240 acres remained to be planted, and contracts had been signed for 3,128.5 acres.
To ensure the long-term sustainability and continued utilization of Myanmar’s bamboo resources and natural bamboo forests, more bamboo plantations need to be established so that bamboo raw materials can be sourced from plantations and natural forests. Myanmar’s bamboo-based industries can develop and thrive through the coordinated efforts of relevant government departments providing technical support, private entrepreneurs and companies making investments, and bamboo farmers’ groups participating in the establishment of bamboo plantations. Such cooperation would also contribute to increased production of finished bamboo products. — ASH/TH


