The Phnom Penh Post

Ministry releases crops report

- Long Kimmarita

AMINISTRY of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries report said the Kingdom cultivated over 2.3 million hectares of rice during this year’s rainy season, but Minister Veng Sakhon expressed concern over the abnormal weather.

The ministry’s report on crop cultivatio­n and agricultur­al exports was posted on Sakhon’s Facebook page on Monday.

It said rice was grown on 2,326,910ha of land, of which 2,137,758ha had been successful­ly harvested.

More than 600,000ha was planted with short-term rice while medium-term rice was grown on approximat­ely one million hectares and some 400,000ha cultivated with long-term rice.

Long-term, unmilled rice is a crop grown in deep water or lowland rice fields and can be grown year-round.

Medium-term rice is grown in medium-depth water and is grown for six months of the year.

Short-term rice, mostly cultivated in small fields which require little water, is grown because it can be harvested usually after just about three months.

In the report, the minister said the figures for agricultur­al exports were calculated from the beginning of the year, whereas rice cultivatio­n was calculated from the beginning of the rainy season.

As well as the rice crops, corn, sweet potatoes, all kinds of vegetables, sugar cane and green beans were grown on 44,003ha while short-term industrial­ised crop cultivatio­n took place on more than 700,000ha.

Some 2,449,945.19 tonnes of milled rice, sweet potatoes, cashew nuts, corn, soya beans, bananas, mangoes, pepper, vegetables and various other crops were exported this year, the report said.

Cambodia exported agricultur­al produce to 20 countries, including China,

Thailand, Vietnam, France, South Korea, the UK and India.

Sakhon said on Monday that the weather this year had been highly abnormal.

A Battambang provincial Department of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries report released on Monday said that despite seeing scattered showers in Battambang town and some districts, several communes in Moung Russey district had experience­d insufficie­nt rainfall and low humidity, causing problems for rice farmers.

The Post could not reach ministry spokesman Srey Vuthy for comment on Tuesday.

Tong Chan Theang, the executive director of the Cambodian Centre for Study and Developmen­t in Agricultur­e, said rice cultivatio­n was at a normal level but farmers faced challenges such as drought in some areas and flooding in others.

“I haven’t studied the statistics in the report but generally, in my observatio­n, in rural areas, there has been considerab­le rainfall and farmers are beginning to grow crops such as sweet potatoes.

“There is a lot of cultivatio­n in areas with enough water and some farmers were able to harvest early in the rainy season. However, some areas suffered drought while others were flooded,” she said.

Chan Theang requested the government, especia lly t he ministr y, to do whatever it could to solve t he challenges facing farmers and not just put out stat ist ics.

She expressed concern that when the harvest season arrives, prices of agricultur­al produce would be too low because market prices were declining. She feared that farmers could lose their livelihood­s.

A ministry report on agricultur­al production last year said rice had been grown on 3.34 million hectares, with successful cultivatio­n on some 2.75 million hectares. About 4.23 million tonnes of agricultur­al produce was exported last year.

 ?? TAKEO PROVINCIAL DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTUR­E ?? Minister of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries Veng Sakhon has expressed concern over the abnormal weather despite 2.3 million hectares of rice being cultivated during this year’s rainy season.
TAKEO PROVINCIAL DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTUR­E Minister of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries Veng Sakhon has expressed concern over the abnormal weather despite 2.3 million hectares of rice being cultivated during this year’s rainy season.

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