Link to: International Year of Natural Fibres 2009: Abaca
Link to: Abrafibras Associação Brasileira da Indústria e dos Produtores de Bambu e de Fibras Naturais


Wikipedia: Abacá – Musa textilis


Additional Information: Abaca is indigenous to the Philippines


Abaca Facts:

The fibres are extracted from the leaf sheath around the trunk of the abaca plant (Musa textilis), a close relative of the banana, native to the Philippines and widely distributed in the humid tropics. Harvesting abaca is labourious. Each stalk must be cut into strips which are scraped to remove the pulp. The fibres are then washed and dried.

Abaca is a leaf fibre, composed of long slim cells that form part of the leaf’s supporting structure. Lignin content is a high 15%. Abaca is prized for its great mechanical strength, buoyancy, resistance to saltwater damage, and long fibre length – up to 3.7 m (12 feet). The best grades of abaca are fine, lustrous, light beige in colour and very strong.

In 2016, the Philippines produced about 62 000 tonnes of Abaca fibre, while Ecuador produced 10 000 tonnes. World production is valued at around $30 million a year.

Source: FAO 2009 and DNFI 2017+2020