BAMBOO
APPLICATIONS/ bamboo and hawaii
A MATCH MADE IN HEAVEN>
Bamboo is currently recognized as one of the most important, sustainable
and environmentally helpful crops on the planet. The tropical clumping
varieties are non-invasive. They produce an annual supply of high
quality timber materials as well as being a nutritious food source
for livestock and humans. They create topsoil and protect against
erosion while producing more oxygen and absorbing more pollution
from the air than any other plant species- bamboo may even be effective
at reducing VOG. They are used for ecological purposes such as soil
stabilization and erosion prevention on hill slopes and verges.
Even after harvesting the culms, the root clumps live on sometimes
for hundreds of years, forming dense root systems that promote soil
retention and regularly produce new shoots. Clumping bamboos are
ideal for protecting tropical forests; as forest tree resources
diminish, the western world is beginning to look at replanting with
bamboo as a better choice for construction materials and cellulose.
Bamboo is a cherished building material in other tropical climates
like Hawaii’s because of its lightweight yet incredible strength,
and the ease with which it’s managed and harvested. The propagation
of different types of bamboo and the creation of bamboo timber plantations
would benefit the island of Hawaii tremendously, reversing decades
of soil erosion that are a direct result of mono-cropping industries
like sugarcane.
The significant drop in tourism and the resultant
loss of thousands of jobs that occurred after the 911 World Trade
Center attacks highlight how seriously vulnerable our economic situation
really is here in Hawaii. With thousands of Big Island residents
unemployed, underemployed, or dependant on welfare for support,
we desperately need a sensible, sustainable, ag-based industry to
ensure our economic future. The development of a viable, entirely
Hawaiian-based bamboo industry could provide hundreds of skilled,
bamboo-certified, master carpenter and craftsmen positions, as well
as agricultural and other jobs. Non-monocropped bamboo plantations
and localized treatment facilities will supply materials for the
ever-increasing industrial and household uses and demand for tropical
bamboos both on and off the islands. B.V.H. will strive diligently
toward workforce development and training, job creation, and market
expansion and education. Accepted building practices with bamboo
that are both financially practical and structurally efficient are
another area we are hoping to address in order to fully realize
bamboo’s economic potential in Hawaii.
Other countries have successfully demonstrated that
bamboo housing can improve the standards of living and beautify
any community. Elegant, cost-effective shelters and public demonstration
projects can help craft a new tropical image for the enjoyment of
current residents and for the benefit of island tourism here on
the Big Island. In the near future, grants to fund low-cost housing
projects and other projects that add value to our tourist product
will be aggressively pursued by B.V.H. It is our hope that the values
of sustainability and the natural beauty embodied by bamboo will
inspire all of Hawaii and its visitors toward respect for the land.
Did you know that if everyone on the island
with an acre or more planted appropriate bamboo along their boundaries
instead of a fence, both neighbors would enjoy excellent protection
from wind and intruders, great privacy, food for themselves and
livestock, an annual yield of materials to build structures and
furniture, not to mention the tropical beauty of the bamboo itself
which would last for generations to come?
For more details and professional analysis of bamboo’s potential
in Hawaii see The Bamboo Report by Leimana Pelton
and local architect, Valerie Simpson.
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