Archive for August 23rd, 2006

Sugar: East Java’s Industrial-Weight Tourism

The Jakarta Post-13 August 2006
Smart operators know the tourism market is full of niches, like eco-tourism and adventure hikes. Then there are the mechanical history buffs. The Jakarta Post contributor Duncan Graham reports from Sidoarjo, where it is sugar season.
Many Indonesians would find it hard to believe that thousands of otherwise normal men would want to spend their time rebuilding, admiring and playing with dirty old machinery — for love, not money.

They gather in groups across Europe, North America, Australia and New Zealand, and like nothing better than a chat about piston slap, cylinder capacity and the viscosities of bearing lubricants.

They rummage through rubbish dumps in grease-stained overalls, they put up their oily hands at estate auctions and poke into tumble-down hay sheds. They’re sustained by the hope that one day they’ll find something decrepit and unique that might be restored to working condition given time, money and skill.

These nostalgia fanatics are usually older men living on good retirement pensions and prepared to travel far in their quest for the flawless flywheel. Their idea of romance is revolutions — that is, the speed of a spinning wheel.

Now imagine finding a factory where these marvelous machines still function, doing the job they were designed to perform a century ago. It would be a mechanic’s paradise, a sweet treat to step back in time and feel the vibrations of the industrial revolution that powered Europe’s conquest of the globe.

Just seeing the old names stamped with pride on the cast-iron casings would make magic moments.

Such roaring, whirring and clanking places wrapped in steam exist still in East Java — as functioning commercial sugar factories.

There are 26 in the province and the government owns the majority. Although originally built and run by the Dutch, the factories were seized by the state during the 1950s.

In that decade, relationships between the Netherlands and Indonesia tumbled to a low point. President Sukarno ordered the former colonialists out and took over their plantations, businesses and factories.

Although the machinery was already well worn when the Indonesian government moved in, few sugar factories have been upgraded.

Watoetoelis is only an hour’s drive outside Surabaya and on the edge of East Java’s cane country. Visitors can always pick out the sugar towns, not necessarily by the fields of green cane that are often hidden behind houses, but by the thin railway lines wriggling unevenly alongside the road.

These were built for wagons pulled by little locomotives to cart the heavy cane to the factory. However, in many operations the produce is now shifted by truck, making the narrow roads even more crowded.

Watoetoelis started business in 1838 as N.V. Cooy & Coster Van Voor Hout, and their factory was rebuilt early last century. Its equipment is all driven by steam, generated by burning cane waste — known as bagasse — after the juice has been extracted through crushing and rolling.

Cane crushers in Australia also burn bagasse, but use the heat to power turbines that make electricity to drive the equipment. In Europe, most local sugar comes from sugar beet.

“It’s extraordinary that the machinery still works so well,” said the factory’s finance manager Dr. D.D. Poerwantono. “Of course we have breakdowns and it’s impossible to get spare parts. So we have to design our own.

“The Europeans who made this equipment built it to last. It’s sturdy and strong and needs maintenance. But unlike much modern gear, it keeps going.”

In most businesses the capital spent on equipment is written off as depreciation in a few years, as the machines get worn or become inefficient and need replacing. As the jargon goes, they have built-in obsolescence. As the money invested at Watoetoelis was in Dutch guilders in the 19th century, the present owners are enjoying a real bonus.

Inside the vaulting, dark factory, the steam-powered pistons push and pull huge wheels, some up to five meters diameter. Mounting such heavy equipment requires pinpoint precision and rock-hard foundations. If a belt isn’t aligned exactly right, wear on a bearing can make it overheat, burn or shatter. Imagine a 20-ton wheel flying loose in a factory where 350 men labor in primitive conditions.

When these monsters were installed, there was no way of using computers, lasers or other modern measuring devices to ensure balance — just the skills of dedicated craftsmen long gone.

To see these marvels in action — not as museum pieces but actually working to produce a needed product — would enchant and astonish mechanical history buffs who usually have to make do with pictures and models. Even people who think it indecent to peer under a car hood can’t help but wonder at the industrial ingenuity of yesteryear.

Some of the sugar factories want to open their gates to organized groups of tourists, but realize organization and upgrading is required. In most cases, new walkways between the spinning wheels and worm drives would have to be installed.

In Watoetoelis, for example, protective rails are often missing, steel ladders are rusted and stairwells slippery. To get from one area to another, visitors have to wade through great piles of loose bagasse.

The factory has already commissioned videos to explain the sugar-making process and staff are keen to show visitors around. But it’s not their primary job, so multilingual guides with public relations skills would be required before scheduled tours can start.

The countryside around the sugar factories is a delight. Because Western visitors are still rare, the residents remain genuinely friendly and the prices of their products are seldom inflated. In the villages, colorful local produce like krupuk (fish crackers) are dried in the sun.

Other home industries such as furniture-making can be seen; most manufacturers are proud to display their wares and pass the time of day, for the pace here is unhurried.

Watching cane cutters labor in the sun slashing the tall plants, making bundles and loading trucks helps Westerners appreciate the advantages of a mechanized society. (The first harvester was invented in Australia.)

Each man is expected to chop a ton a day, and for this he receives Rp 30,000 (US$3.40).

At the corner of the cane fields are little cemeteries where past generations of sugar growers rest in peace.

Travel notes

* Watoetoelis is only 36 kilometers from Surabaya, which has plenty of good quality hotels in the three- to five-star range, with rates much lower than Jakarta. * Modern cars complete with a driver can be hired for Rp 250,000 (US$25) a day, plus fuel and the driver’s meals. * The factories usually run between May and November. Because they are government-owned, permission to enter must be obtained from the head office.

Add comment August 23rd, 2006


Calendar

August 2006
M T W T F S S
« Jul   Sep »
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  

Posts by Month

Posts by Category