Floods and monsoon rains over the past week have cut off roads leading to palm estates in several states, including Kelantan and Terengganu in the east and Johor in the south, making it difficult to harvest palm fruits and transport them to the mills.
“I think December production is going to be down. At this stage it is difficult to say how much but the estimate for 2007 production is 15.5 to 15.7 million tonnes,” Sabri Ahmad, chairman of Malaysian Palm Oil Board, told Reuters. M. R. Chandran, an independent industry analyst and a former head of Malaysian Palm Oil Association, estimated palm oil output this month to fall 18 percent from November.
“Pahang is bad, Johor is also very bad and some parts of
Palm planters in flood-hit areas said their output is likely to decline 20 to 30 percent this month. “Fruits can not be taken out from the estates and as a result we cannot run the mills,” said Kelvin Tan, general manager of Prosper Group, which owns 40,000 acres (16,000 hectares) of palm plantations in central Pahang state.
“When the rains stop, the fruits that will be coming to the market will be over-ripe and some may even be rotten.” Tan said the company’s palm oil output in the first half of December fell 30 percent from November.
Another palm planter, who owns estates in Johor in the south and Sabah on the















