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Malaysia
AsiaSoutheast Asia

Robots take up dirtiest jobs in Malaysia’s palm plantations crippled by labour shortage

  • Automation has also opened up an avenue for women to join a traditionally male-dominated workforce and reduced the need for physical labour

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An autonomous fertiliser spreader at SD Guthrie’s Sungai Linau estate in Selangor, Malaysia. Photo: Bloomberg
Bloomberg

A drone buzzes between trees on a humid Malaysian morning, monitoring the oil palm fruits as they ripen. Self-driving trucks rumble over the vast plantation’s uneven ground, laying fertiliser and picking up the densely packed harvested bunches.

These are just some of the robots the Southeast Asian nation’s top palm growers hope will take over the sector’s most difficult and dirty jobs, plugging chronic worker shortages that have disrupted supplies of the world’s most-consumed edible oil.

With global stockpiles set for the first back-to-back decline in more than 40 years, Malaysia has every reason to push for automation to boost production. Increased awareness of the industry’s problematic reliance on migrant workers – clouded by restrictions and labour abuses – has also encouraged companies to find alternative solutions, said Mohamad Helmy Othman Basha, group managing director of SD Guthrie Bhd., a government-linked company previously known as Sime Darby Plantation.
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“To depend on foreign workers for all these key tasks is actually putting this industry at a very high risk,” Helmy said. “This is why we have to take this plunge. We really have to place these bets.”

Perfecting the robots and deploying them at a commercially viable scale will take years, even as firms pour millions into developing such technology and retraining their staff to use it. But producers are pressing ahead.

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The plantation workforce in Malaysia – the world’s No 2 palm oil producer – was hollowed out during the pandemic, when border restrictions meant companies could not bring in the foreign workers they so heavily rely on. It was the country’s worst-ever worker shortage and palm oil production plummeted, pushing prices to record highs. The industry lost billions.

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