Posted on June 23, 2011, Thursday by The Borneo Post

A LUCRACTIVE MARKET: Malaysia is, at present, the second largest producer of bird’s nests in the world after Indonesia.
SIBU:  The recent spot check on swiftlet farmhouses by enforcement officers  from Sarawak Forestry Department is giving swiftlet farmers the jitters. Some are said to be worried sick, having no idea what would come next from the authority.
Secretary  of Sarawak Bird’s Nest Suppliers Association, Colin Wong, when  contacted, said the spot check was nothing more than a routine exercise  to determine the actual number and the locations of the swiftlet  farmhouses that had mushroomed of late.
“There is nothing to worry  if the operators fulfill all the criteria; follow the proper guidelines  and procedures in operating the farmhouses,” he said. Wong said he had talked to the enforcement officers and were told their operation was not to interfer. “They  were only collecting data; logistics and information on the locations  of the farmhouses that were under their jurisdiction,” he said.
Wong said the association was ready to discuss with the department over its operation if it were necessary.
Swiftlet  farmhouses are mushrooming, mostly in Salim Road, Rantau Panjang, the  West Bank, Lanang Road and even at some residential areas. There are least 10 new farmhouses along Salim Road, some still under construction.
Bird’s  nest is said to be fetching good prices now with the unprocessed ones  costing between RM4,500 and RM5,00 a kilogramme while the processed ones  are sold between RM11,000 and  RM19,000 a kilogramme.
In the central region alone, the number of farmhouses is estimated to be 1,500. Malaysia is currently said to be the second largest producer of bird’s nests in the world after Indonesia.
Indonesia produces 78 per cent of the world’s demand with Malaysia trailing behind at 10 per cent and Thailand the rest. Some 375 tonnes of unprocessed bird’s nests were produced last year. The  nests, made from the saliva of the birds, are claimed to be excellent  for the complexion and in promoting respiratory and gastric health.
The  swiftlets use their spit to string together small gauze-like nests that  are the main ingredient of bird’s nest soup, a Chinese delicacy. 
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