International Network for Bamboo and Rattan (INBAR)

The International Network for Bamboo and Rattan (INBAR) is an international organization created by 22 Member States of the United Nations and has its Headquarters in Beijing, China. Through a growing Network of participating organizations and individuals from all continents of the world, INBAR develops and assists in the transfer of appropriate technologies and solutions to benefit the peoples of the world and their environment.

INBAR has four main programmes:

1. Ecological Security aims at improving knowledge of bamboo and rattan resources and their contribution to rural development, environmental benefits and disaster avoidance.

2. Livelihood Development aims to improve socio-economic benefits of bamboo and rattan in order to reduce poverty and secure incomes.

3. Economic Development aims to improve the recognition of bamboo and rattan as a raw material for sustainable income generation.

4. Outreach aims to: develop a decentralized network; promote technology transfer through improved South-South communication; assess training needs and arrange training activities; provide information services with appropriate media; and assess impact and monitoring.

INBAR regularly publishes technical papers and practical manuals on bamboo and rattan and is the leading source of technical information on the subject. In addition, INBAR has recently established the Journal of Bamboo and Rattan, an international peer reviewed scientific journal on research and development of bamboo and rattan, which covers numerous areas including technical properties, socio-economical aspects, environmental issues, and bio-energetics.

Dr. Ralf H. Kwaschik is the lead scientist representing INBAR in the Bamboo Thematic Network Project. Dr. Kwaschik has expertise in several fields including agriculture, research management, technology transfer and Networking. He coordinates various outreach activities of INBAR and manages the INBAR Interactive Knowledge Networking (INBAR-IKON) project.


Oprins Plant NV (OPRINS) is a nursery and a wholesale supplier of ornamentals and starter plants for the commercial nursery industry and plantations. The company is managed by Jan Oprins and has subsidiaries and joint ventures in several countries, including France, the Netherlands, and Spain. The company has a workforce of 150 people in Europe.

Since 1985 OPRINS has focused on bamboo both as an ornamental and as an agroforestry plant. The company has developed tissue culture protocols for bamboo and is actively involved in biotechnological research in bamboo. In 1999 the company established a modern laboratory for the production of bamboos, and a variety of other plants.  In spring 2000 the company launched a research project focusing on genetic improvement of bamboos with in vitro hybridization and genetic transformation.   Research on bamboo also includes morphology, physiology and genetics.

OPRINS participated in the Fair project Bamboo for Europe as coordinator of the work package on Propagation, Silviculture and Harvesting of Bamboo. Research focused on using bamboo as an agricultural plant in Western Europe that can be harvested mechanically.  In the INCO Project Sustainable Management and Quality Improvement of Bamboos and Products, Oprins Plant conducted research to assess genetic diversity in bamboos using AFLP® markers.

OPRINS has taken the initiative to organize the participants for the BTN project in order to build a strong and open cooperation between industries and researchers in Europe and Asia.

The project manager of the BTN is Dr. Victor Brias. Dr. Brias is the Project Development Manager at Oprins Plant and is responsible for the company's agroforestry projects in developing countries. He has a broad academic background which ranges from philosophy and logic to auditing, finance, and informatics. He has been involved in managing bamboo projects since 1995 and moderates several bamboo discussion groups on the Internet.

The scientist in charge of the BTN project within Oprins Plant is Mr. Johan Gielis.  He holds a degree in industrial engineering and is specialized in bamboo biotechnology and mathematics. In 2001 he published his mathematical research on the geometry of natural forms, and has developed general algorithms with applications in botany.

Mr. Gielis is responsible for Research and Development, Protection of Intellectual Property and Technology Transfer at Oprins Plant.  He has published numerous articles on bamboo and is recognized world-wide as an innovative scientist fully dedicated to bamboo.


University of Hamburg

Institute of Wood Biology

The Institute of Wood Biology of the University of Hamburg has a distinguished reputation in bamboo research - thanks largely to the extensive work of Professor Emeritus Dr. Walter Liese, who is a key partner in the BTN project.

Prof. Liese is an outstanding scientist whose research on bamboo dates back to 1958.  He is a renowned expert on bamboo anatomy and preservation of bamboo.  The depth and volume of his work on bamboo, which comprises hundreds of articles, books, technical reports and feasibility studies, is unparalleled by any single researcher.  He has supervised over 60 Ph.D. theses, most of which dealt with bamboo.  Many of his students are now leading bamboo scientists, notably Dr. Latif Mohmod (FRIM) and Prof. Yulong Ding (INBAR).

Prof. Liese has been engaged in the two EC funded research projects on bamboo. In the INCO project Sustainable management and quality improvement of bamboo and products, his role is that of general adviser to the research program.  In the FAIR project Bamboo for Europe he advised on quality degradation of harvested bamboos.

He is also a past president of IUFRO and has acted as advisor for FAO and INBAR.  Prof. Liese is the recipient of five Doctor Honoris Causa degrees and was honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award of the European Bamboo Society in 1995.

 


University of the Philippines Los Baños

(UPLB)

 

The University of the Philippines Los Baños (UPLB) is renowned as one of the leading educational institutions for agriculture and forestry in south east Asia. It is one of the six constituent universities of the University of the Philippines System. It started out as a College of Agriculture in 1909 and became a full-fledged university in 1972.

UPLB is recognized worldwide for its high educational standards and its commitment to academic excellence. It maintains linkage with 30 other universities and agencies from Australia, Canada, China, Finland, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Nepal, New Zealand, Switzerland, Thailand, Uganda, United States, and Vietnam.

Research activities in UPLB are geared towards sustainable productivity and efficient resources utilization premised on ecological balance, optimal rural and urban development, appropriate technologies for processing industry, basic research and cutting-edge technologies, indigenous knowledge systems, and Philippine culture. The university's extension function complements not only its instruction and research programs, but also supports the extension functions of government and non-government agencies, particularly those related to agricultural and rural development.

Elvira Fernandez (B.Sc., M.Sc. Ph.D.) of the Department of Forest Products and Paper Science is UPLB's lead scientist assigned to the Bamboo Thematic Network project. Dr. Fernandez has thirty years of experience in non-timber forest products and is currently the project leader of an EU project on Forest Products Chemistry Non-Timber Forest Products. 

Other members of UPLB's team for the BTN project are Dr. Armando M. Palijon and Dr. Magadalena Y. Giron.

Armando Palijon (B.Sc., M.Sc. Ph.D.) is specialized in silviculture, urban forestry and landscaping and has 20 years of experience in bamboo and non-timber forest products.

Magdalena Giron (B.Sc., M.Sc. Ph.D.) has 25 years of forestry research experience and is the leader of the ACIAR project Wood, Non-Timber Forest Products Preservation.  


Universiti Sains Malaysia

 

Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM) was founded in 1969 and was first known as University of Penang. USM has undergone a tremendous transformation in terms of physical development, providing the necessary facilities for the steadily increasing student population which has exceeded 17,800.

USM has, over the past six or seven years, embarked on an ambitious programme of 'applied', 'market-driven' or 'priority-specific' research, which now accounts for some 70% of its total research effort. Many projects now incorporate consultancy, technology-transfer and training elements. This has enabled the University to strengthen its industrial links, and has given greater authenticity to its role as a contributor to the nation's industrial competitiveness. Commercially viable discoveries have been made; work is proceeding on promising pre-competitive technologies; successes have been achieved in closer-to market product development; a variety of skills and research findings have been passed on to potential beneficiaries; and some one hundred consultancies have been undertaken annually.

The Unit of Wood, Paper and Coating Technology is a specialized group in the School of Industrial Technology dealing with applied research on aspects of processing and properties of wood and non-wood forest products.  The group also participates in the INCO project Sustainable management and quality improvement of bamboo and products.

The leading scientist of USM for the Bamboo Thematic Network is Dr. Othman Sulaiman.

 


University of Wales, Bangor

The BioComposites Centre

The BioComposites Centre is a designated Scientific Centre of Excellence, which was established in 1989 at the University of Wales, Bangor  with the assistance of the Welsh Development Agency and industry.  It is self financing and carries out contract research on the processing of wood and plant materials. It is staffed by an interdisciplinary team of wood, polymer and material scientists, biologists, chemists and physicists, with many years of experience of research into industrial utilization of wood and plant fibers, and plant polymers. All employees work exclusively on contract research and work is carried out in strict commercial confidence with the same level of attendance given to one-man operations as to multi-national corporations.

The Biocomposites Centre, which has links to the School of Agriculture and Forest Sciences, offers instant access to University expertise and facilities, and the fast response needed for industrial research. The Pulp and Paper activities of the BioComposites Centre are carried out under the name of the Fibre Technology Association.

The BioComposites Centre specializes in industrial contract research on the processing of wood and plant materials such as:

·       Processing and utilization of renewable plant materials.

·       Modification of fibrous and non fibrous tissues of plants and plant polymers to facilitate the production of novel materials.

·       new markets for under-utilized plant resources and residues as industrial feedstocks

·       implementation of new technology in industry

With ten years of experience in the pilot scale production of panel & boards, facilities for the production of MDF and particleboards at the BioComposites Centre are wide-ranging and versatile. The ability to produce and test panels from 100mm diameter to 1000mm square facilitates the development of a wide range of products. All stages of the production process can be closely monitored and varied as required, from refiner pressure and particle size to the rate of cooling of the pressed panel.  The plant is staffed by a crew of wood scientists, fitters, mechanics and chemists. The pilot plant has full access to the expertise offered by other sections of the BioComposites Centre.  All work is carried out in strict commercial confidence and the same level of attendance given to one-man operations as to multi-national corporations.

The MDF pilot plant at the BioComposites Centre consists of a continuous, pressurized refiner, a blowline connecting the refiner to a flash drier, a former, cold pre-press and hot press. The throughput of the refiner is between 30 and 60 kg/hr, depending on the raw material being processed.  

With this pilot plant BC performed test on MDF board with bamboo as a subcontractor in the FAIR project “Bamboo for Europe”. MDF testing was performed by BC for University Gent, contractor in the FAIR project.  The results of these tests indicated that bamboo was among the best non-wood fibers for MDF.

 

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