Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Replanting Palm Oil Plantations in Indonesia to Maintain Palm Oil Productivity and Potential Utilization of Oil Palm Trunk Biomass Waste

One way to maintain or even increase the productivity of palm oil plantations is through replanting or rejuvenation, which is absolutely necessary. Old palm oil trees will decline in productivity, making them uneconomical. In keeping with the gradual planting of palm oil trees, replanting palm oil plantations is also carried out in stages and periodically. Furthermore, the use of superior seeds is also necessary, and one way to produce superior oil palm seeds is by using high-quality planting media, such as biochar. For more details, read here.

Palm oil companies generally replant 4-5% of their total land area annually. However, smallholders generally do not replant properly. This is due to the cost of replanting and the 4-5-year waiting period for fruiting to resume. However, because old palm oil trees naturally decline in productivity even with additional fertilizer, replanting is the only solution. Of Indonesia's approximately 16.8 million hectares of palm oil plantations, 9 million hectares are managed by private companies, 550,000 hectares are owned by state-owned enterprises (PTPN), 6.1 million hectares belong to smallholders or smallholders, and the remainder has not been verified. Specifically for replanting, the government is targeting 180,000 hectares per year for smallholders, but by 2024, only 38,244 hectares had been realized, far from the target.

Even in 2025, implementation of the replanting program will remain low, reaching only 11,777 hectares in the first quarter. Based on this reality, the government has finally lowered the annual replanting target from 180,000 hectares to 120,000 hectares. To accelerate the replanting program, the government could provide additional replanting funds to smallholder farmers. This additional funding would ideally come from business profits, specifically from the utilization of palm oil waste. Various biomass-based products are produced from the processing of palm oil waste.

For businesses based on the utilization of oil palm trunks, business readiness factors, both technologically and market-specific, require careful assessment. With an average hectare of palm oil plantations containing 125 trees, each tree having an average dry weight of 0.4 tons, per hectare yields 50 tons of dry biomass. For an area of ​​10,000 hectares, this translates to 0.5 million dry tons, and for an area of ​​100,000 hectares, this translates to 5 million dry tons. Optimistically, Indonesia could achieve 5% replanting, or 820,000 hectares, which would yield 41 million dry tons of biomass per year. Malaysia, with 5% replanting, or 285,000 hectares, would yield 14.25 million dry tons per year.

The issue of biomass waste from palm oil trees, which covers thousands of hectares, also presents a unique challenge. With the vast volume of old palm oil trees, utilizing them to create value-added products is crucial. This vast volume allows biomass processing plants or industries to be established and operate optimally without worrying about raw material shortages. Products such as pellets, briquettes, and biochar are made from this old palm oil trunk biomass waste. Old palm oil trunks, which are often left abandoned on land, should be utilized to create these useful, value-added products.

For a presentation on palm oil replanting, click here.

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