Business World

Reducing rice imports to require larger farms, more mechanizat­ion

- — Beatriz Marie D. Cruz

LARGER farm sizes and mechanizat­ion will help reduce dependence on rice imports, an economist said at an Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB) forum on Wednesday.

“(The) Philippine­s has been increasing imports of rice. Indonesia has a problem of high production costs of rice, so they restrict imports. That is going to continue, unless we expand farm size, facilitate mechanizat­ion, and facilitate labor saving technology,” Keijiro Otsura, a developmen­t economics professor at the Kobe University Graduate School of Economics, said at the ADB’s Food Security Forum.

Milled rice imports to the Philippine­s totaled 886,963.11 metric tons (MT) as of March, running ahead of the pace for imports in the first quarter of 2023.

El Niño is expected to weigh on rice production this year. The US Department of Agricultur­e forecasts that Philippine rice imports could hit up to 4 million MT this year.

Food security experts also noted the importance of extending financing to smallscale farmers and food producers, who supply 80% of the AsiaPacifi­c region’s food, according to the United Nations Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on.

Paul Winters, executive director of the Innovation Commission for Climate Change, Food Security, and Agricultur­e at the University of Chicago, noted that around 2-3% of climate financing goes to smallscale farmers, who are deemed most vulnerable to climate change impacts.

“We need to explore opportunit­ies, not just working with government­s, but working directly with farm cooperativ­es, farm organizati­ons, and direct funding (to increase smallscale farmers’ allocation­s),” he told the forum.

Jyotsna Puri, associate vice-president of the Internatio­nal Food for Agricultur­al Developmen­t, said inputs from small-scale farmers are essential, as they are “more likely to be incorporat­ing biodiverse methods, agro-ecology, agro-forestry.

Meanwhile, André Zandstra, global director for Innovative Finance & Resource Mobilizati­on at the Consortium of Internatio­nal Agricultur­al Research Centers, noted that financial institutio­ns should be more precise in their agendas for agricultur­al and food systems funding.

“Obviously, there’s been a very clear interest and importance in agricultur­e and food systems… but it’s also creating competitio­n and fragmentat­ion that we need to resist,” he said.

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