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In the days before
electricity, the Timorese people relied on candlenut as a source
of light, burning the nut to light up their homes at night. The
ancient people also used its pulped kernels or boiled leaves for
headaches, fevers, ulcers, and swollen joints.
In Timor-Leste today, candlenut is starting to become a good
source of income for many people. In December last year, Agriculture
Minister Estanislau da Silva officially inaugurated Timor-Leste’s
candlenut oil exports to Hawaii, unveiling the third shipment
of candlenut oil by a local company, Acelda. In just a year since
Acelda started its candlenut oil processing with assistance from
USAID’s Small Grants Program and technical assistance from
the University of Hawaii, Acelda has managed to export 160 barrels
of candlenut oil to Oils of Aloha, a Hawaiian |
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Selling
candlenut to the USAID-supported company, Acelda, helps Maria
Angelica Freitas, 31, send her children to school. Acelda is now
officially a candlenut oil exporter.
Photo by Mauricio Borges, USAID/DAI Small Grants Program
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cosmetic company.
The villagers of Gariuai-Darasula in the eastern district of
Baucau are definitely feeling the positive impact of this development.
As Maria Angelica Freitas, a 31-year-old mother of four, says:
“We are happy to sell our candlenut to Acelda because Acelda
offers a good price at $0.45/kg and this enables us to send our
children to school as well as cover our basic needs.”
Every year since it started operations in 2003, Acelda has been
buying 30 percent of the approximately 1,000 tons of candlenut
produced throughout the three eastern districts of Viqueque, Lautem,
and Baucau. From the exports to Hawaii, Timor-Leste’s candlenut
oil commanded a price of $4 per kilogram, which meant a gross
income of $115,840 for Acelda (for a total of 28,960 kilograms)
in its initial foray into the world market.
As Acelda is set to expand its sale of candlenut oil now that
it has broken into the world market, things can only get better
for Timor-Leste’s candlenut oil-producing communities. As
Maria of Baucau puts it: “Selling candlenut is our main
income. Here, candlenut is our life.”
Nevertheless, these are still early days. USAID, recognizing
the potential of candlenut oil as a possible major export for
cash-strapped Timor-Leste, has big plans for the miracle nut.
Through its Development of Candlenut Enterprises project in Timor-Leste,
USAID, in partnership with Catholic Relief Services (CRS), is
working to make the country’s candlenut oil industry more
competitive by addressing weaknesses at every step of the industry’s
value chain -- from the gathering and drying of candlenut up to
the sale and transport of the oil extract. Soon, more Marias will
be able to earn better incomes from candlenut oil, and that can
only mean improved education and health for their children as
well.

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