Im Swot
Im Swot
Im Swot
Natural rubber - This includes all material made from or containing latex.
Natural rubber is made by two processes, the natural rubber latex process
(NRL) and the dry natural rubber process (DNR)
Thailand
Malaysia
Indonesia
With around 6000 unit comprising 30 large scale, 300 medium scale and
around 5600 SSI/tiny sector nits, manufacturing 35000 rubber products,
employing 400 hundred thousand people, including around 22000
technically qualified support personnel, with a turnover of Rs.200 billions
and contributing Rs.40 billions to the National Exchequer through taxes,
duties and other levies, the Indian Rubber Industry plays a core sector role
in the Indian national economy. The industry has certain distinct advantages
like:
The wide range of rubber products manufactured by the Indian rubber industry
are -
Auto tyres
Auto tubes
automobile parts
footwear
belting
hoses
cycle tyres and tubes
cables and wires
camelback
battery boxes
latex products
pharmaceutical goods
Main sectors
The rubber industry in India is basically divided in two sectors - tyre and non-tyre
sector produces all types of auto tyres, conventional as well as radial tyres and
exports to advance countries like USA.
The non-tyre sector comprises the medium scale, small scale and tiny units. It
produces high technology and sophisticated industrial products. The small scale
sector accounts for over 50% of production of rubber goods in the non-tyre sector.
Going by share of rubber consumption, automotive tyre sector is the single largest
sector accounting for about 50% consumption of all kinds of rubbers, followed by
bicycles tyres and tubes 15% footwear12%, belts and hoses 6%, camelback and
latex products 7%. All other remaining rubber products put together account for
10%.
Exports
Natural rubber has been and will stay as an important export product for
Indonesia. The country is currently the second largest producer of natural
rubber in the world after Thailand. Projection of production, domestic
consumption and export up to the year 2010
In recent years, natural rubber producers have been working together with
major consumers, particularly the global tyre industries and shipping
companies to bring natural rubber to cope with the requirements of the
modern tyre industry. Basically these requirements can broadly be
categorized into three Cís, namely: Cleanliness, Consistency and Cost-
effectiveness.Cleanliness obviously means freedom from dirt or foreign
matter contamination. Consistency sounds pretty straightforward, although
the true interpretation can vary substantially with different users. In
general, consistency means constant quality of raw materials, steady
processing conditions and good packaging practices. With regard to Cost-
effectiveness, natural rubber price must be kept competitive to maintain its
market as a ëbulkí or general purpose elastomer.
WEAKNESS
In Indonesia, the most serious drawback is the fact that smallholder coagula in
the form of unsmoked sheets, slabs or lumps are purchased at the farm gate on
wet-weight basis. This trading practice has resulted in a tendency for the farmers
to retain as much moisture as possible within the coagulum by soaking and/or
inserting bark slivers and other moisture retaining stuff.
OPPORTUNITY
The ongoing development projects of the Government are carried out in the form
of packages of credit and cultivation technology to change the smallholder rubber
planting scheme known as 'jungle rubber', which is not very productive, into a
good block planting scheme with good management and high productivity. The
limited development funds provided by the Government, and the difficulties to
obtain soft loans from international sources like the World Bank and Asian
Development Bank for the expansion of the projects, will be disadvantageous to
the expansion of smallholder rubber, which is the backbone of Indonesian rubber,
in the future. The jungle rubber system is a low-input agro forestry system in
which rubber competes with the regrowth of the natural forest
CONCLUSION
The cooperation will develop ways to convert rubber jungles into an agro forestry
system that sustains both environmental conservation and rubber farmers
livelihood. Pilot projects have been started in West Kalimantan (Sanggau and
Sintang), Jambi (Muara Bungo) and West Sumatra (Pasaman) in 1995. These pilot
projects will manage the rubber jungles intensively by planting high yielding
clones which are suitable for the rubber forest system.
ASSIGNMENT
ON
SWOT ANALYSIS OF NATURAL
RUBBER
IN INDONESIA
SUBMITTED
BY :-
RAJENDRA
KUMAR JENA
DSBSPGDMA09032