Showing posts with label billionaires. Show all posts
Showing posts with label billionaires. Show all posts

Friday, August 27, 2010

Aloe wood turns rural men into billionaires

Nine farmers from Dai Loc district, the central province of Quang Nam, have become billionaires after finding 13 kilo of aloe wood in a forest in the Central Highlands province of Gia Lai.

They will earn up to 32 billion dong (US$1.68 million) from the aloe wood. Each member received over 3 billion dong and Vo Quoc Tuan, who discovered the aloe, took over 6 billion dong.
Tuan said a week ago he found a big rotten trunk of do tree inside a bushy bamboo hedge in a forest in K’Bang district, Gia Lai province. “I called eight fellow men to pull the trunk out and process it. After 30 minutes, we got a piece of aloe as big as my calf,” Tuan said.
Returning home, these men donated 150 million dong to build roads and to assist local poor people. They promised to donate another 150 million dong to build a football grounds and a public house to serve as a playground for local youth.
In early August, two old men in the central province of Phu Yen accidentally picked up aloe, but they didn’t know its value so they sold the piece of aloe at a very cheap price. The one who bought aloe from the two old men re-sold the aloe for billions of dong.
According traditional medicine experts, aloe wood is created from old do trees (Aquilaria crassma Pierre ex Lecomte). This kind of tree grows in forests in the central and central highland regions of Vietnam. Aloe wood is a rare material to process luxury perfumes, scented soaps, and incenses.
Aloe wood is also used to treat many diseases and to make jewelry. Asian people believe that if they wear aloe wood-made jewelry, they can avoid colds.
PV

Monday, June 16, 2008

District of 300 billionaires

In neighbouring districts, many farmers destroyed their pepper fields to grow other kinds of trees, but pepper growers in Chu Se district, the Central Highlands province of Gia Lai, have made a fortune. Chu Se has over 300 farmer billionaires.

It is difficult to describe Hoa An village in Chu Se district because it is a rural village with 135 farmer families, but local farmers live in modern houses and drive cars. However, the richest and most famous farmer in this village is Nguyen Van Khoa.

This farmer owned 20ha of pepper fields. After giving some of the land to his children, this old man currently has 7.5ha of pepper. Last session, it is said that he earned profit of VND4 billion (US$250,000). This year, though the price fell, he still earned VND3 billion. Some say he has several tens of billion VND (over $1 million). Nobody really knows how much money Khoa has but around 20 years ago he spent a billion VND to build his house.

However, Khoa had to work very hard to own his current assets. He was the first man to grow pepper in Chu Se district. After several failed crops, in 1994 pepper prices suddenly soared. At that time, local farmers began growing pepper again because they had chopped pepper trees down in previous years when prices fell. Only Khoa still kept pepper fields and earned high profit.

Based on Khoa’s experience, Hoa An village’s farmers understood that it was suicide if they didn’t have their own policy in plantation and they decided to bind their lives with pepper. From Nhon Hoa, the pepper planting movement spread to the whole of Nhon Hoa commune. Nhon Hoa presently has around 300ha of pepper.

In Nhon Hoa commune, Chu Se district, there are 20 families with annual incomes of VND1 billion ($62,000) upwards, around 50 households with VND500 million ($31,000) upwards, and hundreds of families earning several hundreds of million VND a year. To demonstrate their wealth, many local farmers are driving luxurious cars, including several that are priced at nearly VND1 billion.

That’s the number of VND billionaires in Nhon Hoa commune. The total number for Chu Se district is over 300. All of them are pepper growers and many of them are ethnic minority people. If the pepper price remains stable, Chu Se may have many more billionaires in the future.

Though the pepper season this year is not very good, Chu Se district will harvest around 15,000 tonnes, worth around VND750 billion ($46.8 million).

How will this great sum of money be spent?

It is very risky to grow pepper so experienced growers in Chu Se are prudent. Many farmers have bought real estate in Da Nang, HCM City or hoarded money or gold. However, many others still think as farmers so they are purse-proud. They try to build big houses and buy cars, though they only drive cars around the village roads, not re-invest in pepper. The youth is falling prey to alcohol.

How can Chu Se develop in a sustainable way and have both economic and cultural development? It is still a burning question for not only Chu Se but every part of the countryside in Vietnam.