ROMANIA
Executive Summary
This report gathers data regarding the resources
of oil crops, fibre crops, carbohydrate crops
and medicinal and aromatic plants and their
non-food use in Romania.
Oil Crops
Sunflower, soybean, rapeseed, castor plant
and linseed for oil are all oilseeds cultivated
in Romania. Sunflower is at present the main
oilseed crop. In recent years (since 1990),
the area cultivated with sunflower, and the
subsequent production, has varied significantly,
between 395,000 ha and 1,200,000 ha (in 2003).
The areas cultivated, and subsequently the
production, of the other oil crops have also
varied, but there has been a general decrease
in area since 1990, although in the last
four years (2000-2003) the production of
oilseed crops has slightly increased.
Vegetable oils production is 175,000-250,000
t/year, of which 2-6% is utilised for non-food
purposes. The main non-food utilisation of
vegetable oils and their derivates is in
the paints and varnishes industry, namely:
linseed technical oil for manufacturing processed
oils for the impregnation of wood; soybean
technical oil for the synthesis of alchidic
resins utilised for the manufacturing of
industrial paints; sunflower fatty acids
for the synthesis of resins utilised for
the manufacturing of decorative and industrial
paints; technical castor oil for alchidic
resins utilised in industrial paints, soyalecitin
for decorative paints.
The following consumptions of vegetable oils
and derivates for non-food use are estimated
at the level of the last 5 years for Romania:
technical linseed oil: 100 t/year; technical
soybean oil: 850 t/year, technical castor
oil: 100 t/year, sunflower fat acids 2,700
t/year, soyalecitin: 35 t/year.
The trends for the Romanian market of oil
products used in the varnishes and paints
industry are: unchanging maintenance of linseed
oil consumption in the short term and its
decrease in the long term because of substitutes;
unchanging maintenance of soybean oil consumption
in the short term and its decrease in the
medium term because of the trend to substitute
it by fat-acids; increase of sunflower fat-acids
consumption for manufacturing light coloured
resins: decrease of castor oil consumption
owing to the limitation of the industrial
paints market.
Fibre Crops
Fibre crops traditionally cultivated in Romania
are flax and hemp. Unfortunately, the culture
of these two crops recorded a continuous
regress after 1989, thus the flax cultivated
area in 2003 (400 ha) was approximately 0.5%
of that of 1989 (70,000 ha), while the production
(800 t) was approximately 0.6% compared to
the year 1989. The situation is rather similar
for fibre hemp: in 2003 the cultivated area
(1,200 ha) represented only 2.7% of that
of the year 1989 (46,000 ha), while the production
(3,100 t) was 2.7% compared to the level
of 1989.
The reasons for these decrease are: retrocession
of the land from the state to the former
owners; farmers own relatively low production
areas and consequently have low financial
possibilities to buy high quality seed and
to initiate new cultures in this field; they
had options for other crops; decrease in
the number of processing units; decline of
the domestic textile industry; increase of
imported ready-made clothes.
The technological processes of extraction
of fibres from stems are traditionally biological
processes (anaerobic melting in water) and
mechanical processes (scutching). All flax
and hemp fibre is used in textile applications,
including thin wet and dry spun yarns, strings
and ropes; technical articles (tarpaulins,
tents, sacks, hessian, tie bands, non-woven
articles); woven materials with simple and
combined ties; ready-made clothes (clothes,
bed and table cloths etc.); decorative articles.
Romania has ideal pedoclimatic conditions
for flax and hemp cultures. There are also
about 20 processing units for flax and hemp
fibres and yarns which need to be modernised
and retechnologised. In this respect, the
Central Union for Hemp and Flax from Romania
and the company Treu Hanf AG from Germany
have initiated a common project for improving
and developing the flax and hemp industry
in Romania.
Carbohydrate Crops
In Romania the food and non-food starch producing
factories use maize (65-75% starch content)
as a vegetable raw material. The maize is
cultivated on about 50% of the area cultivated
with cereals for grains (about 3,100 thousand
ha/year) the annual production being 10,000-11,000
thousand tonnes. There is no specific area
cultivated with maize for non-food applications,
but from the whole maize production only
about 0.2% is destined for non-food uses.
The most important consumption of non-food
starch is in the paper industry (5,000-6,000
t/year), followed by the textile industry.
Speciality Crops
In Romania there is a great diversity of
medicinal and aromatic plants cultivated
or collected from wild flora. The agronomist
researchers succeeded in creating 28 Romanian
varieties of plants and on establishing cultivation
technologies (adapted to the pedoclimatic
conditions from Romania) for about 50 vegetable
species. The area cultivated with medicinal
and aromatic herbs is about 12,000 ha/year,
the production being 5,000-6,000 t/year dry
vegetable material. This has decreased from
an area of 23,000 ha in 1993 (12,000 tonnes),
due to the fact that the large dispersion
of cultivated areas has not allowed yet a
satisfactory traceability and reproducible
quality of the vegetable material, requested
by the more severe requirements in the production
of speciality products enforced by the European
legislation being implemented in Romania.
The main cultivated species are: coriander,
common marigold, artichoke, garden thyme,
common fennel, hyssop wort, balm, peppermint,
common spearmint, white mustard, shapsage,
milk thistle.
Beside the cultivated plants, about 155 varieties
of medicinal and aromatic plants are collected
from wild flora (750 - 850 t/year).
The non-food products obtained in Romania
from medicinal and aromatic plants can be
classified in the following manner:
- vegetable products constituted from leaves,
flowers, herb, seeds, fruit, roots, which
are components of diverse simple or complex
teas utilised as adjuvants in prevention
therapy of some diseases;
- extracts, bioactive complexes and pure
substances isolated from herbs to be used
in the pharmaceutical industry or in cosmetics
(formulated as tablets capsules, syrups,
ointments, gels);
- essential oils useful in the pharmaceutical
industry or in cosmetics.
The products are physically, chemically and
microbiologically characterised according
to the Romanian Pharmacopea ed. X requirements
(which are correlated with those imposed
by European Pharmacopea). The introduction
into the market of vegetable origin products
(drugs or cosmetics) needs the approval of
the National Agency of Drug from Romania,
whose methodology is lined to the requirements
imposed by the European Union.
The research in the field of medicinal herbs
is effected at institutes of applicative
research and at universities. Although there
are human resources adequately qualified,
this field lagged behind from the point of
view of equipments, most of them being morally
and physically old fashioned.