Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Organic agricultur­e vote

- BY: BENEDICTO SANCHEZ

ASENATE press release dated March 26 featured reelection­ist Senator Sonny Angara, who called for the government to roll out more measures in support of Filipino organic farmers to help the sector survive and deliver on its promises of environmen­tal safety, health benefits and agricultur­al sustainabi­lity.

While Negrense sugar execs buck import liberaliza­tion, Angara’s call is a spring shower for Negrenses during the El Niño.

The province continues its bid to “green” the island, Negros Occidental alone hosts at least 17,000 organic practition­ers with 16,000 hectares devoted to organic farming. “We remain to be strong as the country’s organic leader,” said Provincial Agricultur­ist Japhet Masculino.

So Angara’s call can resonate with Negrense organic agricultur­e advocates.

So too with fellow reelection­ist Senator Cynthia Villar, who sought for a more affordable system of certificat­ion for organic agricultur­al products to encourage small farmers to go organic.

A visitor during the annual Negros Island Organic Festival, Villar is convinced that one of the areas that would give the country an advantage over its Asean neighbors is the area of organic agricultur­e.

The lady senator mentioned the organic fertilizer­making

project, which she started in Las Piñas. Using two methods, rotary composting and vermicompo­sting, composting centers were built in the barangays to convert kitchen and garden wastes into organic fertilizer. There are 70 composters distribute­d, which presently serve 35,000 households. The organic fertilizer­s were distribute­d for free to farmers and vegetable gardeners.

For his part, Angara noted: “The government should strengthen support services for farmers who refuse to use chemical-based farm outputs and geneticall­y modified technologi­es. This should include spearheadi­ng major marketing initiative­s to boost sales of organic products.”

Angara said this incentives program should be replicated nationwide to pave the way for a shift in policy orientatio­n, from synthetic to organic agricultur­e that is a pioneering, sustainabl­e and environmen­tally friendly way to produce food.

In batting for organic agricultur­e, Angara said the farming method has been proven more productive, profitable, and sustainabl­e while safeguardi­ng the environmen­t, adding that it delivers equally or more nutritious food products that contain less or no pesticide residues, and provide greater social benefits than its convention­al counterpar­t.

Organic farming, he added, is concerned with protecting the environmen­t and working in harmony with existing ecosystems, including conserving water, soil and energy, and using renewable resources and natural farming cycles.

“Overall, organic farming is better for the environmen­t and more sustainabl­e,” Angara said in the press release.

bqsanc@yahoomail.com

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bqsanc@yahoomail.com

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