Cover Crops for Oil Palm Replanting in Indonesia
Replanting is the critical window to establish a leguminous cover crop in Indonesian oil palm. When an old stand is felled, the ground is left cleared and exposed before the new canopy forms, so a fast cover controls erosion, fixes nitrogen to lower early fertiliser cost, suppresses weeds, and protects the soil through the immature years. A fast pioneer gives rapid cover, then vigorous and longer-lived legumes carry it forward. SoilBoost EA supports soil recovery on cleared replant land.

At a glance
- Why replanting matters: cleared, exposed soil and an immature phase before canopy closure leave the ground vulnerable to erosion and weed pressure
- Establish cover early: the replant window is the best time to put a protective legume cover down on bare land
- Fast pioneer: Calopogonium mucunoides (CM) for rapid early cover, 4 to 6 kg/ha
- Core legumes: Pueraria javanica (PJ) 4 to 6 kg/ha; Mucuna bracteata (MB) nursery-transplanted at about 320 seedlings/ha
- Shade-tolerant for canopy closure: Centrosema pubescens (CP) 3 to 4.5 kg/ha; Calopogonium caeruleum (CC) 3 to 4.5 kg/ha
- Lower early fertiliser cost: legume nitrogen fixation contributes to the system as the cover decomposes
- Soil support: SoilBoost EA humic acid conditioner (60.6% humic acid by the CDFA method, pH 3.84, 0.45% sulfur, Leonardite-derived)
- PSR fit: cover crops fit naturally into a smallholder replanting (peremajaan) programme
Replanting is the critical window for ground cover
Replanting (peremajaan) is a recurring reality across Indonesia's oil palm estates and smallholdings. When an old stand is felled and the new generation is still immature, the ground is left cleared and exposed, often on sloping terrain, before any new canopy has formed. This is the single best moment to establish a leguminous cover crop, because the cover does most of its work during the years before canopy closure:
- Erosion control on cleared land: a living legume cover protects bare, exposed replant soil and slows surface runoff on sloping ground.
- Nitrogen fixation: legumes fix atmospheric nitrogen in partnership with soil bacteria, returning it to the system as the cover decomposes.
- Weed suppression: a dense legume mat shades out weeds and reduces manual and chemical weeding on young blocks.
- Soil moisture and organic matter: ground cover moderates soil temperature, reduces evaporation, and feeds soil organic matter through biomass turnover.
Species for replanting
Calopogonium mucunoides (CM): fast pioneer
CM establishes quickly and gives rapid early ground cover, making it the workhorse pioneer on cleared replant land in the first months after planting. Seeding rate: 4 to 6 kg/ha.
Pueraria javanica (PJ): vigorous core legume
PJ (tropical kudzu) is a vigorous, widely used core legume for oil palm, valued for biomass and nitrogen contribution. In immature systems PJ can fix on the order of 250 kg of nitrogen per hectare per year. Seeding rate: 4 to 6 kg/ha.
Mucuna bracteata (MB): nursery-raised, long-lived cover
MB produces dense, persistent ground cover. It is nursery-raised and transplanted at about 320 seedlings/ha (roughly 85 to 100 g of seed/ha), not broadcast like the other species.
Centrosema pubescens (CP) and Calopogonium caeruleum (CC): shade tolerant for canopy closure
As the new palm canopy closes and light at ground level drops, shade-tolerant legumes carry the cover forward. CP seeding rate: 3 to 4.5 kg/ha. CC seeding rate: 3 to 4.5 kg/ha. These species are often combined with pioneers in a mixed cover strategy.

Nitrogen contribution to reduce early fertiliser cost
On the acidic mineral soils common across Indonesian oil palm regions, where nutrients can leach under heavy rainfall, the nitrogen contributed by a healthy legume cover is a useful complement to the estate fertiliser programme during the immature years. Legumes fix atmospheric nitrogen and release it gradually as biomass decomposes, helping maintain nitrogen in the system and supporting lower early fertiliser cost on a young replant. This supports, rather than replaces, a planned fertiliser regime.
Erosion and runoff control on cleared replant land
Cleared replant land is exposed to heavy tropical rainfall before any canopy has formed. On sloping ground this can drive significant surface runoff and erosion. A living legume cover protects the soil surface, slows runoff, and holds soil in place through the immature years. Establishing a fast pioneer early, then carrying the cover forward with vigorous and shade-tolerant legumes, keeps the ground protected from clearing through to canopy closure.
SoilBoost EA to support soil recovery at replant
SoilBoost EA is a Leonardite-derived humic acid soil conditioner manufactured exclusively by Chemiseed Sdn. Bhd. in Malaysia. It is 60.6% humic acid by the CDFA method, pH 3.84, with 0.45% sulfur. On cleared replant soil that has carried a previous stand for many years, a humic acid conditioner supports soil condition, structure, and nutrient retention as the new planting establishes. SoilBoost EA is applied by broadcast at 50 to 100 kg/ha or by drench at 10 to 15 kg/ha. It is a soil conditioner: it is not a fertiliser substitute and not a disease treatment.
Cover crops in a smallholder replanting (PSR) programme
Indonesia's national smallholder oil palm replanting programme, Peremajaan Sawit Rakyat (PSR), provides government support and funding for independent smallholders replanting their oil palm, administered through BPDPKS. Cover crops fit naturally into a peremajaan programme: the replant window is exactly when a protective legume cover is most valuable, holding cleared soil, suppressing weeds, and contributing nitrogen while the young palms establish. Chemiseed supplies the cover crop seed and SoilBoost EA for replanting blocks; we do not administer the PSR programme itself.
Pertanyaan yang Sering Diajukan
Why is replanting the best time to establish a cover crop?
At replanting the ground is cleared and exposed before the new canopy forms, so it is most vulnerable to erosion and weeds. Establishing a legume cover early protects the soil through the immature years and contributes nitrogen and organic matter as the new palms grow.
Which cover crop suits oil palm replanting blocks in Indonesia?
On replant land the priority is fast, protective ground cover on exposed and often sloping soil. A fast pioneer like Calopogonium mucunoides (4 to 6 kg/ha) established early, then carried forward with longer-lived legumes such as Pueraria javanica (4 to 6 kg/ha), protects the soil through the immature years.
Do cover crops fit the PSR (Peremajaan Sawit Rakyat) programme?
Yes. PSR provides government support for smallholder oil palm replanting through BPDPKS, and the replant window is exactly when a protective legume cover is most valuable. Cover crops fit naturally into a peremajaan programme. Chemiseed supplies the seed and SoilBoost EA; it does not administer PSR.
What does SoilBoost EA do at replant?
SoilBoost EA is a humic acid soil conditioner that supports soil condition, structure, and nutrient retention on cleared replant land. It is applied at 50 to 100 kg/ha by broadcast or 10 to 15 kg/ha by drench. It is not a fertiliser substitute.
Where can I buy cover crop seeds for replanting in Indonesia?
Contact Windhi, Chemiseed's Indonesia representative, for a quotation. She supports the whole process in Bahasa Indonesia.
Get a quote for your replanting programme
Minta penawaran or Hubungi Windhi (perwakilan Indonesia):
- WhatsApp: +62 877-7837-4714
- Email: windhi@chemiseed.com
Related pages and products
- Cover crops for Indonesian oil palm: species, rates, and soil support
- Cover crops for Indonesian oil palm smallholders
- Cover crops for Sumatra oil palm
- Cover crops for Kalimantan oil palm
- Cover crop seeds collection
- Pueraria javanica (PJ) seeds
- SoilBoost EA 1kg soil conditioner
References: Seeding rates and application figures per Chemiseed cover crop and SoilBoost EA specifications and established tropical agronomy practice (Mucuna bracteata nursery transplanting; broadcast rates for PJ, CM, CP, CC; Pueraria javanica nitrogen fixation in immature systems). PSR (Peremajaan Sawit Rakyat) is the Indonesian government's smallholder oil palm replanting programme administered through BPDPKS; programme details and support levels are set by the government and have changed over time. General context on Indonesian palm oil replanting is well established in industry literature.