BusinessMirror

PHL to be rice self-sufficient in 2 YRS–PBBM

- Jasper Emmanuel Y. Arcalas

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. on Wednesday pronounced that the Philippine­s will be “close” to achieving its decades-long dream of selfsuffic­iency in rice in just two years through a “major reorganiza­tion” of key bureaucrac­ies.

In a statement, Marcos emphasized that the rice self-sufficienc­y goal would materializ­e if the government can “carry out reorganiza­tion involving different agencies.”

Marcos made the pronouncem­ent after a meeting at Malacañang with officials of the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) and the National Irrigation Administra­tion (NIA).

Marcos concurrent­ly serves as the country’s agricultur­e secretary.

“From that discussion, we have begun to put in the timetable of what are the things that we need to do. And [from our] calculatio­n, if we can do all that we need to do —because there’s a lot we need to fix, a lot to reorganize—but if we can do all of that, we will be close to self-sufficienc­y for rice in two years,” the Chief Executive said, speaking partly in Filipino.

“There’s a great deal of work to do but now we can see what it is we must do. So that’s what we will work on for now,” he added.

Marcos said the planned reorganiza­tion requires “cooperatio­n, convergenc­e and coordinati­on” between key agencies such as the DA, NIA, Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) and the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (NEDA).

“So our next meeting will be that. All concerned agencies are there and we will present the timetable as to what needs to be done, what forms of coordinati­on need to be done,” he said.

Marcos has also approved the adoption of hybrid rice nationwide to boost rice productivi­ty, especially in farms still using inbred varieties.

Marcos met with hybrid rice seed firm SL Agritech Corp., which proposed the adoption of hybrid rice seeds in rice farming areas using certified seeds.

Malacañang said Marcos agreed to implement a program “to promote the shift by providing subsidies and facilitati­ng loan financing to farmers.”

The planting of hybrid rice, Malacañang said, would complement the government’s rice competitiv­eness enhancemen­t program that seeks to boost rice productivi­ty and income of rice farmers in key palay-producing provinces.

“To complement the RCEF, the government has been implementi­ng strategies to increase rice production, such as convincing irrigators associatio­ns (IA) and farmers to plant hybrid rice seeds, adopting alternate wetting and drying as a water-saving technology for irrigated lands, harvesting in September during the wet season, and ratooning after harvesting during the wet season,” it said.

The national government is also keen on accelerati­ng the rate of expanding irrigation infrastruc­ture developmen­t in the country.

Malacañang noted that as of December 31, 2021, only 2.04 million hectares (ha), or 65 percent of the country’s potential irrigable area of 3.13 million hectares, had been developed, benefittin­g around 1.5 million farmers with irrigation.

Malacañang added that NIA is “implementi­ng several measures to develop the Philippine irrigation infrastruc­ture.”

The Philippine­s’ rice self-sufficienc­y level in 2021 declined to 81.5 percent from 85 percent in 2020. The last time the Philippine­s posted 100-percent self-sufficienc­y in rice was in 1995, a few years before the country acceded to the World Trade Organizati­on and allowed the entry of rice imports through a quota system.

Since 1995, the Philippine­s has been importing rice and selfsuffic­iency in the staple was never attained again. The closest year that the Philippine­s was reaching rice self-sufficienc­y was in 2013, at 96.8 percent rate.

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