Farmers may earn more with an eggplant whose genes have been
modified to resist a destructive worm.
The Bt eggplant contains the
Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) bacterium that is toxic to the fruit and shoot
borer worm, a major pest that can destroy up to 70 percent of the crop.
Farmers would have earned
over P4 billion if the Bt eggplant was available for planting since 2011 when
it was expected to be commercialized, said an economist at the University of the
Philippines Los Baños (UPLB).
The Supreme Court is expected
to rule anytime soon whether to uphold a Court of Appeals decision to stop the
multilocation field testing of Bt eggplant. The ruling is not likely to affect
current Bt eggplant research. Eight multi-location field trials, started in
2010, have been completed with the biosafety data submitted to the DA's Bureau
of Plant Industry which will decide on the crop's commercial release.
If only 10 percent of the
area planted to conventional eggplant is planted instead with the Bt eggplant,
farmers would have earned P879 million, said Dr. Cesar B. Quicoy, an Associate
Professor at the Department of Agricultural Economics, College of Economics and
Management, UPLB.
At a 30 percent adoption
rate, he said, that's P2.638 billion in “lost cost”; at a 50 percent adoption
rate, that's P4.397 billion in lost income.
Dr. Quicoy based his numbers
on the assumption that the potential income earned 1 percent per year interest
“as if deposited in the bank” from 2011 when Bt eggplant would have been
available for planting until 2013, the year his study was concluded.
Dr. Quicoy's has conducted
surveys in Southern Leyte, Davao City, North Cotabato and Iloilo, in a study
showing that worms damage more than 60 percent of eggplants.
That's a lot of damage, even
at the average price of P15.71 a kilogram—the average price received by farmers
at the time of the surveys. The price is very conservative; after Typhoon
Glenda hit farms in Southern Tagalog provinces in early 2014, eggplant was
selling at P80/kg in Central Luzon.
“Without the delay in the
commercialization of Bt eggplant, farmers would have earned P130,000 more by
planting the gene-modified crop”, Dr. Quicoy said in a public dialogue between
scientists and farmers at UPLB.
Eggplant is the most widely
planted vegetable in the country: a fourth of vegetables harvested in are eggplants. From
1990-2013, 19,447 hectares of eggplants yielded 170,124 metric tons, or an
average yield of 8.67 metric tons per hectare, mostly harvested by poor
farmers.
A major source is Pangasinan
which produces about 59,223 metric tons; the yield is highest in the Southern
Tagalog provinces at
15.67 MT/ha.
Nationwide, the average
production is 7,326 kg per farm, or 27,478 kg per hectare. This is the average
production per farm of respondents in surveys conducted in Southern Leyte,
Davao City, North Cotabato and Iloilo. The national average is 8.67 MT/ha from 1990-2013. (SciencePhilippines)
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