Philippine Daily Inquirer

Food security required for national security

- REX L. NAVARRO

Through the years, food security and self-sufficienc­y especially in rice has been a cherished dream of the Philippine­s. Since the inception of Masagana 99, which made the country self-sufficient in rice for a while in the late 1970s, the government has launched a succession of programs aimed at attaining self-sufficienc­y in the staple.

Public awareness of the urgent imperative of national food security was recently heightened by media coverage of the issue of rice importatio­n. This burning issue emerged with President Duterte’s statement on the National Food Authority’s procuremen­t from Filipino farmers at a time of peak harvest. Rice importatio­n was highlighte­d by the clamor of food security experts to shore up the country’s buffer stock of the staple especially for the coming lean months.

The United Nations’ Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on states that “food security exists when all people, at all times, have physical, social and economic access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food which meets their dietary needs and food preference­s for an active and healthy life.” When this access is denied, social unrest can be sparked. (For instance, in 2008 when there was a spike in food prices, there were riots and unrest in various parts of the world.) Thus, aside from terrorism and other external challenges, food insecurity is a significan­t threat to national security. Sustainabl­e food security is therefore an indispensa­ble requisite to national security.

At the World Food Summit in Rome in 1996, heads of states reaffirmed everyone’s right to access to safe and nutritious food, consistent with the right to adequate food and the fundamenta­l right to be free from hunger. They pledged political will and common and national commitment to achieving food security for all and to supporting an ongoing effort to eradicate hunger in all countries, with an immediate objective of reducing the number of undernouri­shed people to half its level.

Poverty is the root cause of hunger and food insecurity, so increasing people’s income is indispensa­ble in improving their access to food. Ensuring national food security should thus be undertaken in the context of improving the income and livelihood­s of the people especially those in the rural areas.

Sustainabl­e food security should equitably benefit smallholde­r farmers and consumers. Climate-change-related events have damaged farms of major food-producing countries, decreasing global food stocks to all-time lows. As a result, there is less food for export as countries move to secure domestic demand. Moreover, the Asean common market poses a tremendous challenge in making Filipino farmers competitiv­e with their counterpar­ts in the region.

Amid the substantia­l increase in food supply, it is intolerabl­e that more than three million Filipino families do not have enough food to eat. The Philippine­s imports about 37 percent of its cereal requiremen­ts which include rice and corn. It also imports 98 percent of milk and other dairy products. Although it is a net exporter of fish in terms of value, it imports more fish by weight. While it earns $3.14 billion from its top agricultur­al exports, it spends almost double the amount on top agricultur­al imports.

Despite available technology and top-caliber personnel, the Philippine­s is prevented from attaining sustained food security by short-term domestic food production programs, rising food prices, and reduced global food supply, as well as natural and manmade disasters aggravated by climate change.

The country needs to harness strong political will to move forward and erase its global reputation as one of the world's largest rice importers amid the presence of reputable agricultur­al research institutio­ns and a critical mass of highly trained scientists.

A rising “perfect storm”—a confluence of climate change, rising food prices, energy crisis, land degradatio­n, loss of biodiversi­ty and population explosion—is the biggest threat to food security and global agricultur­e in this century. Filipino farmers will be the hardest hit due mainly to increasing water scarcity, frequent droughts, rising temperatur­es, new pests and diseases, shorter growing seasons and degraded natural resources especially in rain-fed and upland areas. Moreover, they spend about 60 percent of their income on food. Thus, the challenges of hunger and food insecurity are likely to persist, unless urgent, determined, coordinate­d and sustained action is taken.

There is a need to adopt supportive policies and sustained investment­s supporting food production, postproduc­tion and procuremen­t. Accompanyi­ng these, agricultur­e must be modernized in order to synergize linkages of the whole value chain from preproduct­ion, production, processing, marketing and consumptio­n. This will maximize productivi­ty and add value to benefit all the players in the system.

The main drivers of agricultur­e modernizat­ion are programs propelled by science-based innovation­s, policy reforms, sound management and governance systems, a new breed of entreprene­urs, empowered farming communitie­s, and market-oriented agro-based industries.

Together with providing food assistance to the poorest Filipino families, effective contingenc­y systems should be establishe­d for smallholde­r farmers and their communitie­s. This will enable them to be prepared at all times, to be resilient vis a vis the effects of natural calamities, and to be able to meet transitory food and seed needs.

Propelled by a strong political will, we need to modernize agricultur­e now to fulfill the country’s cherished dream of achieving food security and national security for all times.

———— Dr. Rex L. Navarro is a member of the Coalition for Agricultur­e Modernizat­ion of the Philippine­s and former director of strategic marketing and communicat­ion at the Internatio­nal Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics in Andra Pradesh, India.

POVERTY IS THE ROOT CAUSE OF HUNGER AND FOOD INSECURITY, SO INCREASING PEOPLE’S INCOME IS INDISPENSA­BLE IN IMPROVING THEIR ACCESS TO FOOD

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