Edible Birdnest farming can be considered an ideal, most exciting and a very lucrative business. This venture is suitable for those who live in parts of Cambodia, Southern Thailand, Burma, Malaysia, Vietnam, the Philippine and Indonesia. This blog is dedicated to my findings, crazy ideas, encounters with newbies, comments from friends, local news, pictures relevant to Birdnest plus my personal experiences and knowledge gained in swiftlet farming.
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Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Borneo Post: Sarawak Can Produce 2 billion Worth of Birdnest by 2020
Potential RM2b yearly from S’wak swiftlets
by Churchill Edward
March 16, 2010, Tuesday
LUNDU: Sarawak has the potential to contribute up to RM2 billion to the country’s total yearly production of bird’s nest by 2020.
SATISFYING MEAL: Adenan (fourth left) with (from left) Wong, Bujang Helmi, Talib, Nissom, Azmi, Abu Seman and Bujang Jally having lunch in Sematan after the function.
Malaysia as a whole produced 250 tonnes of bird’s nest (from 50,000 birdhouses) worth RM1 billion in 2008 alone.
Yesterday, Sarawak Economic Development Corporation (SEDC) chairman, Datuk Talib Zulpilip expressed optimism that the country would be able to produce an annual RM5 billion worth of bird’s nests with Sarawak contributing RM2 billion yearly by 2020.
When closing a swiftlet farming and marketing strategy course at Sematan community hall here yesterday, Talib said, “Malaysia, in 2008, produced 250 tonnes of swiftlet bird’s nests worth about RM1 billion which also involved 50,000 birdhouses.”
“It is our (government) hope that by 2020, the country would be able to produce a yearly RM5 billion worth of bird’s nests weighing 500 tonnes involving 100,000 birdhouses. The source of this information came from Federal Minister of Agriculture and Agro-based Industry Datuk Noh Omar,” said Talib who is also State Assistant Minister of Tourism and Heritage.
He said Bumiputera involvement in this industry is still low at less than 10 per cent, according to statistics in 2009.
“With such a scenario, Bumiputera involvement in this industry is still very low and lagging far behind compared with that of the non-Bumiputera sector which controlled about 90 per cent of the total industry. We hope local Bumiputera involvement will be greater after we (SEDC) provide training and courses to encourage their participation,” he stressed.
He said, with yesterday’s one-day course, folks in Sematan could see the potential of this industry and tap the golden opportunities afforded by it. He stressed that the industry is a real income generator.
A kilogramme of bird’s nests depending on its grade, could fetch RM4,500 to RM6,500 in the local market while the price could increase to between RM6,000 and RM12,000 (world market).
The highest the price per kilogramme has gone up is from RM12,000 to RM24,000, Talib said when pointing out that entrepreneurs have nothing to fear when it comes to business returns and turnover.
Found at: http://www.theborneopost.com/?p=17113
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