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Bamboo man
Bamboo is perhaps one of the most under-utilised natural
resources of the country. RAJNI BAKSHI writes of one man's vision
to make this grass an essential element of the industrial base,
and not merely a part of the handicrafts industry.
BAMBOO could be the neglected golden hen of India. This is the
story of one man's dogged efforts to utilise the full potential
of this great grass of the Indian forests. Here is a glimpse of a
passionately creative journey that has shown pathways for the
kind of development in which every last Indian benefits.
Vinoo Kaley was an architect turned artisan and activist. Over
the last two decades Vinoo came to be known among social
activists, across the country, as "the bamboo man". He was
usually to be found working among traditional bamboo artisans,
making and helping to design bamboo products that could be used
even in modern urban life.
At other times he was lobbying with bureaucrats, talking to
students, scientists and other professionals.
Venu Bharati - a comprehensive volume on Bamboo was finalised by
Vinoo Kaley just days before he died of a heart attack in June
1998. He was 52 years old. The book has now been lovingly
produced by his colleagues and was released at Wardha on June 11.
This book is an account of Vinoo's journey and his bond with
Venu, one of the many Sanskrit names for bamboo. Here bamboo is
the central point of a larger vision for a different, smarter,
kind of development.
This alternative approach would make more efficient and rational
use of natural resources in ways that create far more livelihood
opportunities than the current policies can ever provide. This is
a vision in which artisans become a vital and sizable segment of
the industrial base, instead of just manufacturing handicrafts.
Bamboo is one of the world's best natural engineering materials.
Its strength to weight ratio is better than that of teak wood and
mild steel. Bamboo grows much faster than wood and requires
relatively little water. It can also be recurrently harvested.
Ample bamboo cover enriches the soil by arresting erosion and
taming flash floods. It offers stakes to trees, fodder to animals
and food to humans. This makes bamboo a key element in
maintaining the ecological balance and ensuring sustainable food
and livelihood security.
India is home to almost 45 per cent of the world's bamboo
forests. But irrational and inefficient harvesting gives us
ridiculously low yields. India produces 4.5 million tonnes of
bamboo in about 8.96 million hectares of forest. China grows 11.6
million tones of bamboo in about 3.79 million hectares of forest.
Vinoo calculated that a tonne of bamboo creates upto 350 person
days of work in the artisanal sector. By contrast it creates 12
person days in a paper mill which also needs large quantities of
water and electricity. Vinoo's energy was focussed on expanding a
bamboo sector" which would not only boost the traditional bamboo
artisans but give livelihood to millions of others.
Bamboo can be used to produce many items of daily use that are
currently made out of plastic or other less eco-friendly
materials. Vinoo Kaley had made his home a living illustration of
this with a mechanical door-bell, soap-dishes, utensil-racks,
beds, tables and chairs - all made out of bamboo. Yet this is a
tiny part of the potential for bamboo as an industry.
For example, bamboo mat-boards are an excellent substitute for
plywood. This technology was originated by the Forest Research
Institute, Dehra Dun and developed further by the Indian Plywood
Industries Research and Training Institute, Bangalore. This
technology is partly handicraft-based, thus generating
employment.
Yet another kind of bamboo mats and grids can be used to build
better, more long-lasting asphalt roads. These techniques have
been successfully tested by two Mumbai based engineers, K. R.
Datye and V. N. Gore. A similar bamboo grid can also be used as
an alternative for wire-netting gabions which are used for flood
control, soil erosion and slope stabilisation.
Shriniwas Khare, an industrialist in Mulshi taluk of Maharashtra,
uses bamboo to manufacture natural fibre-reinforced plastic
composites and products. The fibres are meshed together with
suitable resins to produce a dense matrix of high strength
comparable with metals. Yet it is relatively lightweight, water-
proof and corrosion resistant. The result is posts for fencing
and house construction, gratings for factories and panels for use
in various kinds of furniture.
Venu Bharati is both a documentation of the various bamboo
species of India and also an analysis of how and why this
resource is being misused. India is perhaps the only country that
uses almost 60 percent of its annual bamboo crop to make paper.
This is a stark illustration of resource illiteracy, since there
are many better sources of pulp for paper.
Vinoo spent almost 15 years lobbying against the government
selling bamboo to big industry at absurdly low rates. The answer,
he insisted, was a true free market in which industry is made to
pay the actual cost of raw materials. Such a free market, Vinoo
argued, would give a boost to alternative and dynamic technology
shifts. By bringing paper to its real price, the free market
would reduce paper consumption and encourage more recycling. If
every bamboo stick was worth more, there would be a market
incentive for afforestation and rejuvenation of wastelands by
planting bamboo.
This aspect of Vinoo's appeal has got very little attention. But
his clamour for greater attention to bamboo did have an impact.
In Maharashtra, the government finally made larger quantities of
bamboo available to craftsmen. Last year, the Ministry of
Environment set up a Bamboo Cell which subsequently outlined an
action plan for the development of the bamboo sector. Among other
things, this plan calls for the setting up of a Bamboo Promotion
Agency by 2001. But it offers little hope of any vital, strategic
measures which will employ the market mechanism to boost bamboo
cultivation and products. And this is perhaps the biggest
obstacle to optimum utilisation of bamboo.
Even Vinoo's book raises a plethora of "how to" questions which
are left unanswered. But then Vinoo never claimed to have all the
answers. He worked in a poetic and lyrical manner to raise venu
mitra - bamboo friends, across India - from the corridors of
power, to remote villages and everywhere in-between. Vinoo had
his own "logic" for this dogged persistence in the face of all
odds. For he used to say: "A goods train won't move by my pushing
it, or even by getting ten others to help in pushing it. But our
action may inspire someone to get an engine!"
"Venu Bharati" is published by Aproop Nirman, B2 Pushpagandha,
Dharmpeth, Nagpur - 440010.
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