Financial assessment of oil palm cultivation on peatland in Selangor, Malaysia

Oil palm plantations on peat soils are generally believed to have greater environmental impacts than those on other soil types. Nonetheless, Malaysia operates substantial incentives to maximise palm oil production, which in practice encourage the establishment of plantations on peatland. This paper...

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Main Authors: M.N. Noormahayu, A.R. Khalid, M.A. Elsadig
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Mire Conservation Group and International Peat Society 2009-02-01
Series:Mires and Peat
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mires-and-peat.net/map05/map_05_02.pdf
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spelling doaj-76352f1c69c24f1ab9621d238e91ba0c2020-11-25T02:18:20ZengInternational Mire Conservation Group and International Peat SocietyMires and Peat1819-754X2009-02-01502118Financial assessment of oil palm cultivation on peatland in Selangor, MalaysiaM.N. NoormahayuA.R. KhalidM.A. ElsadigOil palm plantations on peat soils are generally believed to have greater environmental impacts than those on other soil types. Nonetheless, Malaysia operates substantial incentives to maximise palm oil production, which in practice encourage the establishment of plantations on peatland. This paper explores the social and economic basis of oil palm cultivation on one peatland estate at Sungai Panjang in the state of Selangor, peninsular Malaysia. Data were obtained by conducting a questionnaire survey of 200 farmers who cultivate oil palm on peat soil. Some of the data were cross-tabulated against farmers’ ages in order to identify any age-related trends in education level, the area of land farmed, annual income and knowledge about oil palm cultivation. The Cobb-Douglas production function was used to model the financial output from oil palm in terms of the costs of chemical inputs and labour. The results indicated that cultivation of this crop gives decreasing returns to scale on peatland in Sungai Panjang, and that chemical inputs are more important than labour cost in determining the level of financial output. Finally, the financial viability of oil palm cultivation for farmers was assessed by calculating three financial indicators (NPV, BCR and IRR). This can be a profitable investment so long as growth conditions, costs, selling price and interest rate do not fluctuate substantially. Greater annual returns can be achieved over 20–25 years than over shorter periods, especially of less than 10 years.http://www.mires-and-peat.net/map05/map_05_02.pdfeconomic analysispeninsular Malaysiaplantation forestrySungai Panjang
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M.N. Noormahayu
A.R. Khalid
M.A. Elsadig
spellingShingle M.N. Noormahayu
A.R. Khalid
M.A. Elsadig
Financial assessment of oil palm cultivation on peatland in Selangor, Malaysia
Mires and Peat
economic analysis
peninsular Malaysia
plantation forestry
Sungai Panjang
author_facet M.N. Noormahayu
A.R. Khalid
M.A. Elsadig
author_sort M.N. Noormahayu
title Financial assessment of oil palm cultivation on peatland in Selangor, Malaysia
title_short Financial assessment of oil palm cultivation on peatland in Selangor, Malaysia
title_full Financial assessment of oil palm cultivation on peatland in Selangor, Malaysia
title_fullStr Financial assessment of oil palm cultivation on peatland in Selangor, Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Financial assessment of oil palm cultivation on peatland in Selangor, Malaysia
title_sort financial assessment of oil palm cultivation on peatland in selangor, malaysia
publisher International Mire Conservation Group and International Peat Society
series Mires and Peat
issn 1819-754X
publishDate 2009-02-01
description Oil palm plantations on peat soils are generally believed to have greater environmental impacts than those on other soil types. Nonetheless, Malaysia operates substantial incentives to maximise palm oil production, which in practice encourage the establishment of plantations on peatland. This paper explores the social and economic basis of oil palm cultivation on one peatland estate at Sungai Panjang in the state of Selangor, peninsular Malaysia. Data were obtained by conducting a questionnaire survey of 200 farmers who cultivate oil palm on peat soil. Some of the data were cross-tabulated against farmers’ ages in order to identify any age-related trends in education level, the area of land farmed, annual income and knowledge about oil palm cultivation. The Cobb-Douglas production function was used to model the financial output from oil palm in terms of the costs of chemical inputs and labour. The results indicated that cultivation of this crop gives decreasing returns to scale on peatland in Sungai Panjang, and that chemical inputs are more important than labour cost in determining the level of financial output. Finally, the financial viability of oil palm cultivation for farmers was assessed by calculating three financial indicators (NPV, BCR and IRR). This can be a profitable investment so long as growth conditions, costs, selling price and interest rate do not fluctuate substantially. Greater annual returns can be achieved over 20–25 years than over shorter periods, especially of less than 10 years.
topic economic analysis
peninsular Malaysia
plantation forestry
Sungai Panjang
url http://www.mires-and-peat.net/map05/map_05_02.pdf
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