>From: "Ambon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Subject: [nasional-list] Penjajah Lebih Bermoral Menangani Hutan
>Date: Mon, 31 Jul 2006 23:42:38 +0200
>
>http://www.pikiran-rakyat.com/cetak/2006/082006/01/0902.htm

>Penjajah Lebih Bermoral Menangani Hutan
>Oleh Dr. M. DARUSSALAM
>
>Penulis, Alumni S-3 (ITB), Dosen Pasca Unpad.

***Perindustrian zaman penjajahan tidak butuh kayu dan produk kayu. Penulis, 
seorang dosen, seharusnya melihat fakta itu, baru menjilat pantat Belanda. 
Bila pada waktu itu pasar dunia butuhkan kayu, Belanda juga tidak akan 
bermoral.

***Menggundulkan hutan2, perlu alat2 besar moderen. 90% alat2 adalah buatan 
AS, Eropa (termasuk Belanda) dan Jepang. AS salahkan Syria dan Iran 
perlengkap Hizbollah.  Penulis, seorang dosen, patutnya tegor (bila tidak 
mau salahkan) AS turut bersalah telah  perlengkap Barito dkk, kenapa tidak ?

***Saya kutip satu article di Voice of America : 
http://www.voanews.com/english/2006-07-31-voa13.cfm , agar bangsa Indonesia 
jangan bisanya salahkan pemerintah, bahkan bangsa sendiri.  SBY telah 
menghasilkan kestabilan dan ketenangan di dalam negeri. Iklim damai akan 
meningkatkan GDP kita.Segala percobaan men-diskreditkan pemerintah harus 
dikalahkan.

***Japanese Find Rising Costs of Chinese Chopsticks Hard to Swallow
By Steve Herman
Tokyo
31 July 2006

Herman report - Download 512k
Listen to Herman report



People eat noodle using chopsticks called "waribashi" at a fast-food chain 
restaurant in Tokyo
It has been four months since China imposed a tax on wooden chopsticks 
because of concerns about deforestation. That and rising production costs 
prompted Chinese exporters to raise chopstick prices by about 30 percent. 
This is causing indigestion in Japan, where most restaurant meals are eaten 
with disposable chopsticks from China.

Walking into the Suikoden pub in Tokyo's working class Ikebukuro district, 
customers hear gyoza dumplings sizzling in the frying pans as they get a 
traditional greeting from the staff.

But when patrons sit down to eat, they find not the traditional disposable 
wooden chopsticks, but plastic ones.

Japanese have long cherished their disposable wooden chopsticks, known as 
"waribashi", and take credit for inventing them 130 years ago. Until a few 
decades ago, the waribashi was decidedly a Japanese product.

Gradually imports from China, where there were more trees and cheaper labor, 
knocked domestic utensils off the table here.

Now, at thousands of restaurants across Japan waribashi are vanishing 
completely - the result of higher costs. China imposed a five percent tax on 
disposable chopsticks, in an effort to save trees, and manufacturers raised 
prices to cope with higher labor and shipping costs.

At many restaurants, customers' lips now touch plastic with every bite.

For patrons at Suikoden, such as Tsunehiko Ito, that leaves a bad taste in 
their mouths.

Ito says his primary concern is hygiene. He worries how well plastic 
chopsticks in restaurants are washed.

Some restaurants say they switched not because of cost, but out of 
environmental concerns - fears that disposable chopsticks contribute to 
deforestation in Asia and are wasteful.

But Hiroyuki Takayama at Suikoden is a skeptic.

Takayama says he has heard that the wood from China used to make most 
waribashi is scrap, so he does not think it makes a difference concerning 
the environment.

The waribashi industry concurs, saying chopsticks are mostly made from trees 
that are primarily harvested to make construction timber and paper products.

Environmental concerns aside, a problem for many Japanese diners is that 
plastic chopsticks, most frequently found in Chinese-style restaurants here, 
are more slippery, especially when eating noodles.

Tabloid newspapers in Japan have been warning that disposable wooden 
chopsticks may soon become as precious as the silver ones used by ancient 
Chinese emperors, with reports that China may end waribashi exports 
entirely.

The head of the Japan Chopsticks Import Association, Ichiro Fukuoka, says 
that is an exaggeration.

Fukuoka says China has given no such indication that it will further 
increase taxes on waribashi or end exports.

Fukuoka, who is also executive director of a major waribashi importer, 
acknowledges the 30 percent price hikes recently have prompted one-tenth of 
his customers to change to cheaper chopsticks of lesser quality.

Fukuoka has spent 40 years acquiring chopsticks for Japan and he says while 
there are hopes that other countries, such as Vietnam, Indonesia or Russia 
could eventually be sufficient alternative sources, no one can beat China on 
labor costs and quality.

Holding aloft a package of chopsticks from Vietnam in one hand and a package 
from China in the other, he says that even a casual user can see the quality 
difference. The Vietnamese waribashi appear rougher both to the eye and to 
the touch.

There are still a few domestic manufacturers of waribashi but Japan does not 
have the trees or production capacity to meet the demand. The average 
Japanese goes through 200 sets of chopsticks a year. China provides all but 
three percent of those 25 billion sets of waribashi.

To diversify the country's supply, Ichiro Fukuoka and his fellow importers 
are traveling the world, trying to find the right combination of timber, 
labor costs and production quality. Until then if restaurants in Japan and 
their customers prefer to pick up wood rather than plastic they will have to 
rely on the Chinese product - whatever the cost.




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