The Phnom Penh Post

Fresh push for contract farming

Vietnamese oil firm still on track to drill in 2017

- Cheng Sokhorng Kali Kotoski

FRUSTRATED with the failure of a $27 million emergency loan package to help rice farmers find a fair market price for their crop and stem the tide of smuggled paddy across the borders, Agricultur­e Minister Veng Sokhon is flogging a new model for the nation’s restive rice farmers: contract rice farming.

Addressing a meeting yesterday between government policymake­rs, the Cambodian Rice Federation (CRF) and private sector rice millers and exporters, Sokhon said the emergency loan package announced in September had failed to provide a secure local market for farmers to sell their rice paddy at a reasonable profit.

“The root of the issue is the impact on the livelihood of farmers as paddy rice prices decreased to a point that they could not make any profit from farming,” he said.

In response, he said the government would look to encourage more contract rice farming, and would for the first time instruct provincial officials to oversee and enforce the agreements.

In contract farming, buyers sign agreements with farmers for the production and supply of crops to be delivered at a future date, usually at predetermi­ned volumes, qualities and prices. Buyers often supply seeds, fertiliser and other inputs upfront, recovering these costs from the production while sparing farmers the burden of debt.

Sokhon pointed out that government regulation­s for contract farming have existed since 2011, but until now have not been enforced.

“It’s time for enforcemen­t, and from now on all provincial governors and directors of provincial agricultur­al de- partments will intervene by officially stamping [the agreements] and standing as witnesses to ensure that they are honoured, and to ensure the price and market for farmers.”

He added that contract farming was a valuable model, as “it gives farmers assurance that they will receive a fair price for their rice paddy, and that they won’t need to worry [about finding a market for their crop] after the harvest”.

Angkor Kasekam Roongroeun­g Co Ltd (Angkor Rice) was the first company in Cambodia to introduce largescale contract farming. It has applied the model to noncertifi­ed organic rice since 2001, and reportedly has contracts with over 50,000 small- holder farmers for cultivatin­g fragrant rice.

Amru Rice, one of the nation’s largest rice exporters, has also applied contract farming, though on a smaller scale. According to Sokhon, the company’s efforts have resulted in a significan­t improvemen­t in the livelihood­s of rural farmers.

“Amru has already implemente­d contract farming, which offers more benefits to the community, as buyers agree to a fair price and buy at that price,” he said.

The chairmen of Angkor Rice and Amru Rice could not be reached for comment yesterday.

Tang Chhong Ngy, marketing manager of rice miller LBN Angkor (Kampuchea), said his firm was already developing its own model for contract farming, but millers were generally against the practice as it locks them into purchase prices.

“Many rice millers think contract farming requires a lot of paperwork, and they try to avoid it in order to take advantage of farmers by dropping their prices [after harvest],” he said.

Chhong Ngy said the government’s latest push for contract farming would depend entirely on the willingnes­s of the parties involved. He claimed the government has promised to oversee and enforce the agreements before, but expects it could be some time before this actually happens.

Va Saroeurn, president of Mongkol Agricultur­al Developmen­t Cooperativ­e in Battambang province’s Sangke district, said smallholde­r farmers in the cooperativ­e had been offered contract farming agreements before, but rejected them.

“We know about the benefits of contract farming, but it is hard for us to follow the strict criteria of these agreements, even if they offer a good price,” he said.

According to Saroeurn, the farmers struggle to produce standard rice paddy. Contract farming, however, sets conditions on quality and techniques, such as cultivatio­n without chemicals, limitation­s on fertiliser use and the farming of one single variety of rice. A GOVERNMENT official yesterday denied local media reports that it had received a request from Vietnamese stateowned PetroVietn­am Exploratio­n Production Corporatio­n (PVEP) to extend the explorator­y drilling contract for Block XV in Kampong Thom province for another year.

Meng Saktheara, secretary of state at the Ministry of Mines and Energy, said PVEP’s current timeline was intact with the company set to enter the third phase of its exploratio­n campaign by January 2017. The new stage would see the company begin drilling test wells after years of seismic and geological surveys.

“There has been no formal announceme­nt of an extension and the company has not approached the ministry asking for one,” he said.

In April, the government approved a request by PVEP to extend its explorator­y thirdphase drilling contract until January 2017, a year after it was scheduled to commence drilling. The company, which has held exclusive rights to the onshore block since 2010, was granted two years for each phase to be completed, and an additional two years to create a viable business plan for extraction. Its licence is set to expire in 2018.

Local media claimed this week that PVEP was seeking a further extension on test drilling due to the prolonged slump in global oil prices, ongoing negotiatio­ns with Cambodian authoritie­s and a shakeup within the company’s upper management.

Saktheara expressed optimism that the company was on track to fulfill its agreement to explore the 6,900-square-kilometre onshore block, but said that there were still technical hurdles that needed to be overcome.

“The company still has to submit a new drilling campaign study after we found that their previous campaign fell below the 20 percent success rate,” he said. “So we required them to conduct a new seismic survey to enhance their rate of success.”

Saktheara explained that once the results of the survey were submitted to the government, they would be reviewed and approved, providing the company discovered an ample amount of oil to warrant drilling.

“We are currently working with the technical team from the company and are awaiting the new data to see the commercial viability,” he said.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? An Amru Rice worker carries a sack of rice through the company’s processing factory in Phnom Penh’s Por Sen Chey district last year.
HENG CHIVOAN An Amru Rice worker carries a sack of rice through the company’s processing factory in Phnom Penh’s Por Sen Chey district last year.
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