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Closing oil palm yield gaps among Indonesian smallholders through industry schemes, pruning, weeding and improved seeds
Author(s) -
Tarek Soliman,
Felix K. S. Lim,
J. S. H. Lee,
L. Román Carrasco
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
royal society open science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.84
H-Index - 51
ISSN - 2054-5703
DOI - 10.1098/rsos.160292
Subject(s) - palm oil , pruning , agroforestry , production (economics) , yield (engineering) , hectare , indonesian , agricultural engineering , elaeis guineensis , fertilizer , data envelopment analysis , business , agricultural science , agricultural economics , agronomy , environmental science , economics , mathematics , agriculture , geography , biology , engineering , mathematical optimization , materials science , archaeology , metallurgy , macroeconomics , linguistics , philosophy
Oil palm production has led to large losses of valuable habitats for tropical biodiversity. Sparing of land for nature could in theory be attained if oil palm yields increased. The efficiency of oil palm smallholders is below its potential capacity, but the factors determining efficiency are poorly understood. We employed a two-stage data envelopment analysis approach to assess the influence of agronomic, supply chain and management factors on oil palm production efficiency in 190 smallholders in six villages in Indonesia. The results show that, on average, yield increases of 65% were possible and that fertilizer and herbicide use was excessive and inefficient. Adopting industry-supported scheme management practices, use of high-quality seeds and higher pruning and weeding rates were found to improve efficiency. Smallholder oil palm production intensification in Indonesia has the capacity to increase production by 26%, an equivalent of 1.75 million hectares of land.

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