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Sustainable Rubberwood
http://www.greenlivingtips.com/articles/142/1/Sustainable-Rubberwood.html
By Green Living Tips
Published on 08/25/2007
 

While not the most commercially appealing of names, rubberwood is a high quality timber product that can be sustainably harvested. Previously discarded or burned, the versatile wood is now becoming sought after by the furniture making and construction industry.


Rubberwood - timber from the rubber tree

Mahogany, teak, jarrah - all names that you'd usually associate with high quality furniture. Unfortunately, demand for these timbers have seen vast swathes of deciduous and tropical forest habitat destroyed. Items now made from these trees are incredibly expensive.

But rubberwood? It probably doesn't stir up the same sort of associations of quality, but you'll soon start seeing it incorporated into furniture and other timber products more often.

Rubberwood comes from.. you guessed it.. the rubber tree (aka Pará rubber tree or Hevea brasiliensis). The rubber tree exudes a latex sap, the world's primary source of natural rubber.

Rubber trees have a straight trunk and grow an impressive 75 feet or more over their lifetime and mature trees have a diameter of around 3 feet. They are grown in densities of approximately 90 trees per acre. Over 36 million acres of rubber trees are currently being grown in the tropical regions of Asia, Africa and America.


Tapping latex from a rubber tree

The trees are harvested for their latex each year, but by the time they get to around 30 years old, latex yields decrease to the point that it's not commercially viable to tap the tree any more.

In the past when the rubber tree reached this stage, it would be felled and burned on the spot or chopped up for firewood to make way for a new tree - but the wood is now being used extensively in furniture, flooring, construction and even toys. Given their large size, a single tree can provide a great deal of timber.

Rubberwood is strong, flexible, resistant to fungus, bacteria and mold. It's compatible with most industrial adhesives, easy to work with and has a beautiful grain suitable for quality furniture.


From simple toys, to dining settings to intricate furniture,
rubberwood is suited to many purposes

The wood is a pale cream to yellowish brown color and is easy to stain to gain deeper colors. The finish adaptability is rated at 94% of that of teak under standard conditions and comparable to beech for workability.

While the clearing of rainforests to date to make way for rubber plantations is very regrettable, it's great to see that rubber trees are now being used for more than just their sap and firewood - it's an incredibly versatile tree and given there's no shortage of supply, there's great economic potential for the countries involved in the rubber industry. Maybe the added value of the tree will mean these countries won't have to knock down more forests as they'll make more from the land already under under plantation - one can only hope.

So next time you're out shopping and you see rubberwood furniture or products, don't let the name of put you off; it's an eco-friendly, sustainable and high quality wood!

Pick up some more tips on choosing greener furniture