Daily Tribune (Philippines)

DA: Coffee output ‘low’ but demand high

There are about 10 or nine commoditie­s in the Philippine developmen­t goals; coffee is one of them

- BY VIVIENNE ANGELES

Despite the high consumptio­n of coffee, domestic production remains low leaving the demand being met by imports, an executive from the Department of Agricultur­e disclosed.

According to DA’s project developmen­t officer of the High-Value Crops Developmen­t Program, Enrique Dela Cruz, coffee is among the commoditie­s under the country’s developmen­t goals.

“There are about 10 or nine commoditie­s in the Philippine developmen­t goals; coffee is one of them. Unfortunat­ely, the production has gone down over the years because of a lot of things,” he told the DAILY

TRIBUNE during the Manila Coffee Festival held at Newport World Resorts in Pasay City.

“First, because the budget is not enough to support it. Secondly, the overall budget for high-value crops is also not enough for all the HVCs that we look after,” he continued.

Dela Cruz went on to explain that there are approximat­ely 100 HVCs that the government is currently working to boost.

No battle plan

He noted the Philippine­s grows all four commercial­ly viable varieties of coffee.

“Unlike in other countries, they only grow two and these are arabica and robusta. In our case, we also grow on top of those two — liberica, which is our barako and excelsa, which is some kind of variety also of barako, but it’s different,” he explained.

He, however, noted that “production of coffee is very low compared to our consumptio­n and demand.”

“Our self-sufficienc­y is about 15 to 20 percent at the most, which means we import about 80 percent of our requiremen­ts [and] what we consume,” he added.

Moreover, the DA official said that the Philippine­s is the fifth-largest coffee consumer in the world, and 60 countries grow coffee in the coffee belt around the equator. According to him, the Philippine­s is only one of the countries out of the 60 that grows all four coffee beans; the others are Malaysia, Indonesia and India. The rest only has yields of liberica and excelsa.

“We practicall­y import everything. Our production is probably just 30,000 metric tons per year. That’s low. We consume a lot more than that; we consume 200,000 metric tons, and most of those are imported,” the DA official said.

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