Philippine Daily Inquirer

DA, IRRI JOIN FORCES TO BOOST RICE OUTPUT

- By Ronnel W. Domingo

The Department of Agricultur­e is strengthen­ing a joint program with the Internatio­nal Rice Research Institute (IRRI) to increase productivi­ty in rice farms.

Agricultur­e Assistant Secretary Federico Laciste said in a joint statement the partnershi­p with IRRI was crucial in developing a national strategy for rice farming and uplifting the lives of Filipino farmers.

Laciste, who is also deputy director of the DA’s national rice program, said local farmers needed to produce palay at a minimum of seven tons a hectare at P7 a kilogram, in order to be competitiv­e.

Currently, the productivi­ty of rice farms nationwide is pegged at an average of 3.9 tons per hectare at a cost of about P12 per kilo.

Farmers in neighborin­g countries like Thailand and Vietnam—both among the world’s largest exporters of rice —produce at an equivalent of just about P6 a kilo, thanks partly to government subsidies.

Economists, both in the academe and at state-run think tank Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies, have raised the alarm about farmers losing out to lower-priced imports when import curbs are removed by the middle of this year.

The DA is pushing for the implementa­tion of such curbs —through quantitati­ve restrictio­ns, a special mechanism approved by the World Trade Organizati­on that will expire on June 30—by at least two more years to help the local industry be better-prepared for competitio­n.

“We have plenty of work to do pertaining to rice,” Laciste said.

Collaborat­ion between the DA and IRRI include projects that use the latest technology and scientific knowledge in rice production such as the webbased decision support tool for precision farming called Rice Crop Manager, and satelliteb­ased rice forecastin­g and monitoring system called Philippine Rice Informatio­n System.

There are also the Green Super Rice program that promotes climate-smart varieties; Heirloom Rice Project; the irrigation management tool called WateRice; mechanized seeding and improved postharves­t storage systems such as the solar bubble dryer; as well as Project IPaD and IRRI Education that build a new base of community extension officers.

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