Manila Bulletin

Villar: Gov't to fund assistance programs for local farmers

- By VANNE ELAINE P. TERRAZOLA

Senator Cynthia Villar has assured that the government will continue to fund its assistance programs for local farmers amid the continued importatio­n of rice and the COVID-19 pandemic.

Villar, in a statement, said there is no need for

additional cash for the Rice Competitiv­eness Enhancemen­t Fund (RCEF) since the Rice Tarifficat­ion Act already guarantees an annual ₱10-billion budget.

The chairman of the Senate Agricultur­e and Food Committee was commenting on the ₱8-billion fund requested by the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) for its Rice Resiliency Project amid the coronaviru­s outbreak. The Department of Budget and Management released to the DA last April the requested fund, which included an allocation for “enhanced RCEF”.

“The RCEF does not need any additional budget allocated from the COVID-19 prevention,” Villar said.

She noted that the DA, aside from the RCEF, has a separate National Rice Program, which has a yearly P7 billion budget for buying fertilizer and hybrid seeds.

Republic Act 11203, enacted last year, mandates the provision of an annual ₱10-billion budget to the RCEF for six years from the tariffs collected from rice imports.

The RCEF shall be used to help farmers compete with imported rice, by giving them farm equipment, inbred seeds, low-interest credit, and training. The RCEF is expected to aid in lowering the cost of local rice.

“This cheaper supply of rice from our own rice farmer helps lower rice prices for Filipino consumers,” Villar said.

The government recently scrapped its planned government-to-government importatio­n of 300,000 metric tons of rice after Vietnam lifted its ban on rice exports.

Vietnam is a major source of rice imports of the Philippine­s.

Meanwhile, about 2.26 million bags of certified inbred rice seeds have been distribute­d for free to rice farmers to help boost the country's rice production.

Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice) Deputy Executive Director Flordeliza Bordey on Tuesday said seed delivery is already 90 percent of its target 2.5 million bags of certified inbred seeds for distributi­on this wet cropping season.

“We have already reached 968 municipali­ties or about 97 percent of

our target 1,000 municipali­ties in 55 provinces,” Bordey said during the Laging Handa virtual presser.

She explained that farmers listed in the Registry System for Basic Sectors in Agricultur­e and are practicing transplant­ing method received one 20-kilogram (kg) bag of seed for every half hectare of cultivated area up to a maximum of six bags for those who have rice fields larger than 2.5 hectares.

Farmers practicing the directseed­ing method received two bags of seeds for every half hectare, she added.

The distributi­on of certified inbred seeds was done under the Seed Program of the Rice Competitiv­eness Enhancemen­t Fund, which is a component of the Republic Act 11203 or Rice Tarifficat­ion Law.

Under the law, P10 billion will be allocated every year for the next six years from 2019 for RCEF and will be allocated as follows: ₱5 billion for farm mechanizat­ion; ₱3 billion for high-yielding seeds; ₱1 billion for credit support; and ₱1 billion for training programs. (With a report from Ellalyn B. de Vera)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines