Department of Agriculture Sec. Proceso J. Alcala lauded the Central
Luzon farmers for helping achieve the highest rice harvest in the Philippine
history during the Farmers` Lakbay Palay hosted by the Philippine Rice Research
Institute in Science City of Muñoz, Nueva Ecija, April 1-4.
Despite strong typhoons that
ravaged agricultural lands last year, Alcala told about 1,500 farmers that they
had produced 18.44 million metric tons of rice, enlisting the Philippines as
the fastest growing rice production country in Asia.
The production also made the
country 97-percent rice self-sufficient in 2013. Although three-percent short
of the 100 percent target, the country, however, registered a 16-percent
increase within three years. The country was only 81-percent rice
self-sufficient in 2010.
With the rice sector`s
performance last year, the agriculture secretary discouraged the public from
focusing on the deficit in the 100-percent rice self-sufficiency target.
“We have tried hard. Nawa`y [mapahalagan] natin, lalo na sa mga
nasa Manila, ang pagpupunyagi nating mga magsasaka. Hindi ho tayo titigil sa 97 percent.
Magpupursige pa din tayo para ang isasaing ni Juan dela Cruz, dito ipupunla,
dito itatanim, dito aanihin [May we, especially the city dwellers, value
the efforts of the farmers. We’ll not stop at 97 percent. We’ll work harder so
that the rice that we’ll serve on our table will be planted and harvested in
the country],” Alcala said.
Alcala, who also unveiled the
latest rice technologies, urged the farmers to be receptive of new farming practices
as this may help them reduce production cost and make the price of rice more
competitive in the market.
“We can`t solve problems such
as rice smuggling in an instant. We still have a long way to go to stop rice
smuggling. As long as our production cost is high, rice smuggling will always
be around,” he said in Filipino.
He said that rice smuggling
persists in the country because domestic rice prices are uncompetitive to
Southeast Asian countries such as Vietnam.
“Production cost in the
Philippines is [about P11 a kilo] while in Vietnam, it`s around P6,” he said.
Alcala said that if farmers
can peg production cost even at P8, rice smuggling will be minimized.
At present, PhilRice is on
its second season of implementing Palayabangan: 10-5 challenge, a nationwide
farming competition that aims to produce 10 tons/ha yield at only P5 input cost
per kilogram of palay. (PhilRice)
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