India seeks brains to crack coconut conundrum
Wednesday, 16 September 2009
MUMBAI, Sept 15 (AFP): It's a question that has left the best minds in India scratching their heads: how to harvest the coconut crop when no one either wants or knows how to climb trees any more.
But officials in Kerala, the southern agricultural state famed for laid-back tourism at its tropical beaches, are hoping new technology can be harnessed to solve the problem. They have announced a six-month competition for engineers to design a mechanical coconut harvester.
"If they win, we will give them one million Indian rupees (21,000 dollars)," the state government's principal secretary for industries, T. Balakrishnan, told AFP by telephone.
"If the design is interesting and doable, we will help them to commercially produce the machines in Kerala."
India is one of the world's leading coconut suppliers, producing some 13 billion coconuts every year, as well as a variety of by-products like coconut oil and coir, used to make matting or treat soil.
The industry generates between sixty billion and eighty billion rupees every year, according to India's Coconut Development Board, based in Kerala's commercial hub, Kochi.
Kerala itself has 7.9 million hectares (20 million acres) of coconut tree plantations that thrive on its sandy soil and warm, humid weather and produced a massive 5.6 billion coconuts in 2007-08. Some 3.5 million families are involved directly or indirectly in the industry.
But socio-economic changes linked to economic growth, as well as the risks involved in climbing trees up to 30 metres (100 feet) high, mean the industry has to adapt, says Balakrishnan.
Traditionally, members of the low-caste Paravan clan were responsible for plucking coconuts, with fathers passing on the skill of shinning up tree trunks to their sons.
"The problem we're facing today is that we're not getting people to do the harvesting of coconuts as we used to," Balakrishnan explained.
"There are fewer numbers of children. They are more educated and it's not a glamorous job."
Thomas Mathew, chief marketing officer at the Coconut Development Board, agreed.
"The six to eight harvests a year are done manually by climbing, but lifestyle changes and the increase in the per capita income of people in Kerala have meant traditional climbers, the second generation, is not coming.
"That's the main issue."
The average wage of a coconut picker-about 300 rupees a day-has risen threefold in just a few years because of a shortage of willing volunteers, he added.
But officials in Kerala, the southern agricultural state famed for laid-back tourism at its tropical beaches, are hoping new technology can be harnessed to solve the problem. They have announced a six-month competition for engineers to design a mechanical coconut harvester.
"If they win, we will give them one million Indian rupees (21,000 dollars)," the state government's principal secretary for industries, T. Balakrishnan, told AFP by telephone.
"If the design is interesting and doable, we will help them to commercially produce the machines in Kerala."
India is one of the world's leading coconut suppliers, producing some 13 billion coconuts every year, as well as a variety of by-products like coconut oil and coir, used to make matting or treat soil.
The industry generates between sixty billion and eighty billion rupees every year, according to India's Coconut Development Board, based in Kerala's commercial hub, Kochi.
Kerala itself has 7.9 million hectares (20 million acres) of coconut tree plantations that thrive on its sandy soil and warm, humid weather and produced a massive 5.6 billion coconuts in 2007-08. Some 3.5 million families are involved directly or indirectly in the industry.
But socio-economic changes linked to economic growth, as well as the risks involved in climbing trees up to 30 metres (100 feet) high, mean the industry has to adapt, says Balakrishnan.
Traditionally, members of the low-caste Paravan clan were responsible for plucking coconuts, with fathers passing on the skill of shinning up tree trunks to their sons.
"The problem we're facing today is that we're not getting people to do the harvesting of coconuts as we used to," Balakrishnan explained.
"There are fewer numbers of children. They are more educated and it's not a glamorous job."
Thomas Mathew, chief marketing officer at the Coconut Development Board, agreed.
"The six to eight harvests a year are done manually by climbing, but lifestyle changes and the increase in the per capita income of people in Kerala have meant traditional climbers, the second generation, is not coming.
"That's the main issue."
The average wage of a coconut picker-about 300 rupees a day-has risen threefold in just a few years because of a shortage of willing volunteers, he added.