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Bamboo in Hawaii
by Carol Bain (5-1-96)
Carol Bain attended the IV International Bamboo Congress held in Bali Indonesia in
June, 1995, that attracted over 500 participants from 37 countries who are researching,
testing and promoting the use of bamboo around the world. The following article highlights
the information that may be applicable for the future of bamboo in the Hawaii islands.
The Potential of Bamboo for Economic Diversity in Hawaii
As the big sugar plantations are slowly exiting the Hawaiian Islands, economic planners
are searching low to high-tech for replacement industries. The fear and desperation to
find a solution for employment is almost palpable along the Hamakua Coast, where hundreds
are out of work since their sugar plantation closed down.
It is agreed that diversification is the key toward developing a strong economy. With land
becoming available that once grew sugarcane, it is natural to look toward agricultural
products to provide quantities of jobs.
As an isolated group of islands in the Pacific, Hawaii needs to develop local resources
toward a sustainable, more self-reliant future.
Our residents are paying high shipping costs for basic items like furniture and building
materials for houses. The final price of importing materials for contructing an average
two-bedroom furnished home are out of reach for many.
Five-piece living room sets of bamboo furniture may cost $250 from Thailand or Indonesia,
but by the time the shipping container costs are covered and delivery and taxes are added
on, the price may have increased to as much as $4,000
Costs for these basic living items, housing and furniture, could be reduced dramatically
if we developed local resources for building materials.
What one resource grown in Hawaii could provide plenty of jobs and raw material to
construct furniture and housing? It's growing right under our noses. It is bamboo.
The plant is aesthetically beautiful, has literally thousands of uses and is known as one
of the fastest growing aborescent grasses in the world. As a high yield agroforestry
product, bamboo is being considered as one of the answers to provide a sustainable future
in a world of diminishing resources.
Asia certainly thinks so. An estimated seventy-five million homes each year are needed in
Asia, and they are looking to bamboo to provide them.
Bamboo withstands up to 52,000 pounds of pressure per square inch, rivaling steel. Dried
bamboo is lightweight as aluminum yet is known for its high strength-to-weight ratio. In
Costa Rica, homes that used bamboo withstood the 1992 earthquake that reached 7.6 on the
Richter scale at its epicenter. Properly constructed bamboo framed homes have demonstrated
excellent wind strength.
The Philippines has almost the identical land change situation as Hawaii. Some of the
country's large landholders growing sugar for export, aware of the falling sugar prices on
the world market, have already diversified to bamboo.
One company has planted bamboo on their marginal and submarginal lands, while keeping
their more fertile land in sugar. "Bamboo was shown as profitable in the Philippines
for these lands.", according to the Director of Forestry Research for the Philippine
government, Dr. Segundino Foronda.
"From our own perspective we would like to go into the production of bamboo
construction materials due to our lowering resources of wood materials in the Philippines.
We are really looking at bamboo not as a substitute material but an alternative
material."
As far as establishing a bamboo plantation in the example set in the Philippines, the
transition from sugar to bamboo was smooth. The plantation workers had no difficulty
adapting to the similar propagation techniques.
"No fertilization is needed for bamboo on these marginal lands, just plant it and
forget it," Dr. Foronda said. Cultivation and harvesting can be accomplished with
simple tools, putting control directly into farmer's hands.
Moanikeala Akaka, OHA Trustee, hopes that type of employment transition, from sugar to
bamboo plantation, could occur also in Hawaii. "There are social problems as a result
of the diminishing role of sugar plantations here," said Ms. Akaka. "We have had
family stress, suicides, family abuse going on because of the frustration of the lack of
jobs now that the sugar company is going out of business."
"There is a hope that bamboo could be a viable alternative, not only as a
construction material but also to be able to give these plantation workers jobs,"
said Ms. Akaka, "and perhaps the Office of Hawaiian Affairs can play a role in the
development of the bamboo industry in Hawaii."
For an agroforesty product, bamboo is considered a high-yield renewable natural resource.
Ply-bamboo is now being used for wall paneling, floor tiles, bamboo pulp for paper making,
briquettes for fuel, and raw material for furniture and housing construction.
Bamboo and its related industries already provide income, food and housing to over 2.2
billion people worldwide. There is a 3-5 year return on investment for a new bamboo
plantation versus 8-10 years for rattan. Other forest species of hard and soft woods can
take twice that long.
Demonstrating the economic viability of a relatively "new" industry that takes 5
years to show a return on investment will require patient promotion and education, because
banks and traditional loan institutions consider any investment over 3 years
"risky".
Though large-scale commercial production of bamboo has not been promoted before, this
useful plant has long been present in the Hawaiian islands.
Various uses of `ohe, bamboo, by Hawaiians included musical pipes or flutes, water
containers, bamboo rattles called puili, and even fire blowing tubes. `Ohe Kahiki,
introduced from Tahiti, was a type of bamboo with short, green joints and large leaves
that produced a hard wood used for knives, fishing poles, and house construction.
In Hawaiian legend, Maui's grandmother Hina planted a variety of bamboo she had brought
from Tahiti. When Maui saw it, he reached for it and cut his hand o the sharp edges. To
prevent this from reoccurring, Hina refashioned bamboo to be round and smooth on the
outside, as it is today.
In Hopi Indian origin myth, the lowest of the four worlds was so crowded that two gods
went down and planted various plants in hope that something would grow to a height that
would allow escape from that unhappy place. Finally, bamboo grew tall enough to allow
people to climb its joints to a higher world.
Bamboo is known for its ability to grow quickly, and is even used for erosion control. One
species, Gigantochloa levis, can grow over five meters in height in just twelve weeks. No
wonder this is called the bamboo "shoot" phase.
Bamboos were once considered weeds in forestry practice whereby attempts were made to
prevent or control their growth. Currently in Malaysia, due to the rapid expansion of
bamboo-based industries, bamboos have become the second most important non-timber forest
crop after rattan. Of the commonly utilized bamboo species in Malaysia, only nine are
suggested for plantation.
Hawaii is fortunate to have one of the better clumping species: Bambusa vulgaris. The
stem, called a culm, is glossy green and sometimes yellowish when mature. Its natural
habitats include forest fringes and river banks. This species can be used for paper
making, construction, edible shoot production, and agricultural and fishing materials.
Bamboo is a perennial grass belonging to the sub-family Bambusoidae of the family
Graminae. It has a woody stem arising from rhizome buds. The buds will develop into bamboo
shoots usually at the onset of the rainy season.
The plant is characterized by its cylindrical, mostly hollow culms with a series of nodes
and internodes. Most species have small branches at the nodes of culms. Wall thickness
varies and density ranges from 500 to 800 kgm.
Commonly catagorized as a "runner" or a "clumper", the runner variety
sometimes spreads so quickly it can frighten the small gardener away from all species of
bamboo entirely. However, rural areas and back yards in Hawaii have tall clumps waiting
for the entrepreneur to harvest.
The Philippines study found that a bamboo plantation alone without processing will not
provide many benefits. Vertical integration, putting raw bamboo through a processing
aspect, is going to provide more value to the overall product, and provide more local jobs
as well.
Countries that already appreciate the uses of bamboo, such as Viet Nam are seeing even
more potential for construction materials development. This includes a new
"ply-bamboo" that is actually stronger that standard plywood.
"Hawaii can develop a processing plant for approximately $800,000 that can create
laminate, chipboard and plywood out of bamboo for local construction or export,"
according to Doug Lewis, owner of Bamboo Hardwood Company. He and his partner recently
constructed plant in Viet Nam that is beginning production of similar bamboo materials.
The initiation of this kind of industry will take a ten-year commitment of 2,000 acres
planted in bamboo. Though most traditional banks and lending sources may consider that
duration before a return on investment too risky, this alternative industry may be just
the kind of venture for jobs that OHA is looking for.
Trustee Akaka said, "It only stands to reason that bamboo is very aesthetic; it has
so many uses; it has strength. There are those of us who would be willing to have this as
an alternative industry for the sugar came plantations that are going out."
"Bamboo has been used in the America's for over 9000 years," according to
Columbian architect, Oscar Hidalgo, "and the Incas developed a basic platform-type
construction 3,000 years ago which is still used today in Columbia."
Hidalgo has found examples of homes in Columbia using bamboo framing that have lasted over
100 years, thus demonstrating solutions to destructive insects such as termites and the
powder post beetle.
Though covered bamboo may only last ten-fifteen years, a thin coating of mortar will keep
the moisture out as well as the insects. Fungus and bugs love bamboo like any other wood
in this tropical climate. Methods using chemicals for preservation are generally more
effective for the protection of bamboo than the non-chemical methods, but they are not
always economical and applicable.
Traditional, non-toxic treatment methods include water leaching, ponding, boiling, smoking
and clump-curing. Costa Rica and Bali successfully use a sap-displacement method called
Boucherie, where a boron-type preservative is pressured into the culms.
Bamboo is one of the strongest building materials. Bamboo's tensile strength is 28,000 per
square inch versus 23,000 for steel. In the tropics is it possible to plant and grow your
own bamboo home. In a plot 20m x 20m2, in the course of 5 years, two 8m x 8m homes can be
constructed from the harvest. Every year after that the yield is one additional house per
plot.
By the early 1980's, Costa Rica desperately needed to develop local raw materials as
housing solutions because they were destroying 1% of their forest timber per year. Rural
areas of Costa Rica needed a cheap and locally available resource material for housing in
order to stop the migration to the city.
With the end of their tropical rainforests in sight within this generation, the Costa Rica
Proyecto Nacional De Bambu (National Bamboo Project) met the challenge by introducing
bamboo to the country. The project resulted in 200 hectares, 494 acres, of genus Guadua
planted over an eight-year period. Subsequently, many bamboo framed houses were built in
rural areas and suburbs which cost only $7000 U.S.
The new homes built in Limon, Costa Rica, with bamboo framing reinforced with mortar made
such a strong composite material they withstood the violent 1992 earthquake when, next
door, the traditional wood home collapsed. Even homes caught in subsequent mud slides kept
their integrity better than the traditional construction and have tested well for wind
resistance.
Costa Rica is now building 10 per cent of total house construction with bamboo, and the
goal is to reach 100 per cent and to develop the furniture industry in the rural areas.
In a report on the future of housing technologies by Dr. M.A. Sattar of Bangledesh, bamboo
had many advantages including good growth and mechanical properties. However, the gaps in
research include a lack of information on specific species for strength, and testing
methodology standards are not set. As far as a construction material, bamboo is not a
cylinder but is tapered. Fastening devices need to be investigated and no code of practice
is set internationally.
Solutions to these include rural based enterpreneurships and cost assessments including
machinery and tools. Dr. Sattor saw a direct need for government subsidy to implement
bamboo industry in underdeveloped and even so-called, "developed" countries.
Technical feasibility for bamboo construction materials and other products will need
promotion and application of research.
The International Network of Bamboo and Rattan (INBAR) has been instrumental in developing
research exchange about bamboo propagation and uses. Though developing countries are
taking advantage of the information, more industrialized or so-called
"developed" areas like Hawaii should not overlook these resources.
The Netherlands have made great strides in standardizing the building codes for bamboo
housing. However, research is still needed in many areas of propagation, management, and
standardization of testing methodology for all species has not been set.
Commercial scale bamboo production is technically feasible in many tropical envrionments.
Kent Fleming, at the University of Hawaii College of Tropical Agriculture and Human
Resources, has developed a practical methodology for calculating the financial and
economic cost and return associated with bamboo production.
Internet users who want more information about bamboo, locate the Bamboo Web at
http://www.kauai.net.
copyright 1995 by Carol Bain
808 246-2111
PO Box 2320, Puhi, HI 96766

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