KARAK, Jordan — Long before whiteboards, beamers and laptops entered modern school
classrooms, teachers relied on the humble, dusty, sometimes screechy blackboard
chalk — a material that has created a Jordanian business success story.
اضافة اعلان
Chemical engineer
Salah Aloqbi remembers sitting on a bus in Amman in 1995 when he hit on the
idea that would lead him to create his company. More than two decades later, it
boasts 150 staff, with exports to more than 100 countries.
Chalk, a white,
soft limestone, was formed eons ago when the shells of tiny marine creatures
were compressed on the sea floor — and the landlocked
Middle Eastern desert
country of Jordan is blessed with vast deposits.
“It was a
game-changing idea,” recalled Aloqbi, now 49, who founded the Jordan
Chalk Manufacturing Company.
“I was returning
from work at the Jordan Carbonate Company when I heard a radio interview saying
that the calcium carbonate produced by the company is used in various
industries in Jordan — except the chalk industry.”
Aloqbi pondered how
to make blackboard chalk, which was until then wholly imported, to gain extra
value from the calcium carbonate that is also used to produce white cement,
make soils less acidic, and toothpaste more abrasive.
Seven years later,
he launched a small factory in
Karak governorate south of Amman, with two rooms
and just five workers, and started experimenting — initially by pulverizing the
porous material with a meat mincer.
“But the chalk that
we produced at that time was no longer used around the world, so we moved to
produce dustless medical chalk,” he said, referring to a carbonate-based type
with larger particles.
The right stuff
Some 2,149 attempts later, the businessman said proudly, he hit the right
formula for dustless chalk, creating a “very strong export opportunity” that
now sees his company produce 10 billion pieces a year.
Jordan has a near
endless supply of the raw material, with the ministry of energy and mineral
resources estimating the country’s “assets of limestone exceed 1.3 billion
metric tons”.
Limestone is the
common form of calcium carbonate CaCO3, the main ingredient for chalk.
“It comes to mind
that this is an outdated product, but the truth is that we are struggling to
meet the great demand,” Aloqbi said as he inspected hundreds of cartons heading
to Britain and Germany, Mali and
Morocco.
The chalk pieces
come in a wide palette of colors and are used for art and play around the
world.
The firm has also
branched out into colored crayons and modelling clay, and is the country’s only
producer of chalk sticks.
Today, the company
sits on a 7,500-square-meter plot and offers sought-after jobs in a country
where the unemployment rate soared to 25 percent last year, about the same as
the poverty rate.
“Most of us are
from villages in Karak governorate,” said one employee, 28-year-old Sundus
Majali. “More than half of the workers are women.”
At first, she said,
“it was difficult for parents to allow females to work ... But today they have
no problem with that, especially because the factory is safe, not like other
workplaces”.
Another colleague, Alaa Aloqbi, 33, said “the factory has
provided job opportunities at a time when life became difficult”.
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