Philippine Daily Inquirer

GO FOR FOOD REQUIRING LESS RESOURCES TO GROW, DA URGES CONSUMERS

- By Karl R. Ocampo @kocampoINQ

The government will try to wean Filipinos on consuming food commoditie­s that require large areas to grow as the country’s resources are seen not be able to cope with the country’s rapid population growth.

A new advocacy under the Duterte administra­tion is set to determine the food requiremen­ts of Filipinos in the next 50 years through a National Food Consumptio­n Quantifica­tion survey under the Department of Agricultur­e.

This will complement a study to be done by the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO) that will measure the country’s food consumptio­n in relation to its food production.

Latest data from the Philippine Statistics Authority showed the country’s population in 2015 was already 100,981,437, or a growth rate of 1.7 percent.

Aside from assessing the country’s food requiremen­ts, according to Agricultur­e Secretary Emmanuel Piñol, the study will also determine what food Filipinos prefer to eat, how much of these food do Filipinos consume, where and how can the country produce these food, how much of these food do we need to produce in the next 50 years, and up to what point can the country’s land and aquatic resources can suffice the needs of the population.

It will also find alternativ­es or new measures on how the sector can produce more food using less land and water, and how it can encourage Filipinos to veer away from consuming food that require more resources to grow.

“People have to understand that the 30-million hectare land area and the width of the seas within the country’s EEZ (exclusive economic zone), including the 25-million hectare continenta­l shelf east of Luzon called the Philippine Rise, is finite,” said Agricultur­e Secretary Emmanuel Piñol on his Facebook page where he often posts major policies and programs of the agency.

“There will be a point in the life of this nation when the land and the seas will no longer be able to produce enough food for Filipinos,” he added.

In a press conference earlier this week, the secretary revealed that based on the computatio­n of the DA, Philippine Rice Research Institute, and Internatio­nal Rice Research Institute, the country was now 96 percent rice self-sufficient.

He added that the country’s paddy output of 19.3 million metric tons (MT) last year was equivalent to about 13.1 million MT of milled rice at an average milling capacity rate of 65 percent. This is higher than the country’s an- nual estimated rice requiremen­t of about 11.2 million MT.

Nonetheles­s, Piñol pointed out that even as the Duterte administra­tion’s target to reach rice self-sufficienc­y by 2020 would be achieved, it might take only about five to 10 years before the country would revert to producing less than the population requires.

“Wemay achieve rice self-sufficienc­y by 2020 but it will be temporary and fleeting as I expect population to overtake the capacity of the country to produce food the traditiona­l way,” he said.

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