JAKARTA, Dec 5 (Reuters) – Top rubber producers Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia will meet on Dec. 16 to discuss ways to prop up distressed prices, including potentially curbing exports, a senior Indonesian trade official said on Wednesday.
Representatives from the three countries which comprise the International Tripartite Rubber Council (ITRC) will meet in Putrajaya, Malaysia, according to Iman Pambagyo, Director General of International Trade Negotiation at Indonesia’s Trade Ministry.
“We will focus on discussing issues that has kept prices of natural rubber low,” he told reporters.
ITRC will be looking at two possible measures to boost prices including reducing exports and tree replanting which “will automatically reduce supply,” Pambagyo said.
Benchmark rubber futures on the Tokyo Commodity Exchange hit a 27-month low last month on concerns over global oversupply.
“The issue is how all the members will comply with this,” Pambagyo said. “The Indonesian Trade Minister has strongly conveyed this in the previous meeting, we have to maintain discipline.”
The Indonesian government said last month it will launch a rubber replanting program this month, with the pilot project covering up to 6,000 hectares of land in Sumatra. The government aims to replant 700,000 hectares of rubber farms by 2025.
The group has also invited Vietnam to join the discussions given the country’s rising supply to the global rubber market, Pambagyo said.
ITRC will also consider using more rubber in roads and high-rise construction projects to absorb excess supply, he added.
Indonesian President Joko Widodo last week ordered the country’s Public Work and Housing Ministry to buy rubber directly from farmers to lift local prices. (Reporting by Bernadette Christina Munthe Writing by Fransiska Nangoy Editing by Manolo Serapio Jr.)