Philippine Daily Inquirer

Digital ‘farm-to-market road’ breaks ground

e-magsasaka proponents win East-West Seeds Innovation Olympics top prize

- —CARMELA REYES-ESTROPE

SAN RAFAEL, BULACAN— In the near future, the country’s farmers could start selling their produce in a digital market, thanks to students who believe they have finally found a way to make food producers richer.

An online database platform called “e-magsasaka” hopes to reduce the involvemen­t of middlemen in marketing crops and eventually increase farmer profits by 20 percent and keep prices at an affordable level, said a group of graduates who took home the P250,000-prize in the first Innovation Olympics organized by East-West Seeds.

Gorby Dimalanta, Aiah Sarmiento and Aaron David, who completed their Masters of Science degree in Innovation and Business at the Asian Institute of Management; EJ Tamayao, a Bachelor of Science degree holder in informatio­n systems at De La Salle University; and Glenn Bueno, who earned a Bachelor of Science degree at Mapua University, plan to use their prize money for new and innovative ideas.

Plant-breeding firm EastWest Seeds developed the Innovation Olympics to help discover new technologi­es that would improve the productivi­ty of farmers, said Dexter Difuntorum, the company’s downstream marketing manager.

He said the winning entry addressed two of the major problems of farmers—direct access to markets and the absence of market informatio­n among buyers and food growers.

The “e-magsasaka” online platform is a database where buyers could locate farmers who grow the produce they require.

The platform also allows farmers to actively market their crops.

“The principle in farming [which the online tool embraces] is to focus more on the marketabil­ity rather than the production [ of crops],” Sarmiento said.

Interested buyers and farmers can register at www.emagsasaka.com for free until the end of the year.

Once linked, they get real-time updates on available crop supplies, deliveries and payments.

Farmers are required to postcrop developmen­t schedules to allow buyers to time their ship- ment close to the date of harvest.

The “e-magsasaka” also widens the market possibilit­ies of farmers who used to sell their produce only at local trading areas.

“Take farmers of San Ildefonso town in Bulacan. Their concentrat­ion of deliveries will not only be limited to Balintawak and Divisoria where they commonly bring their products,” Sarmiento said.

“The products being produced by our farmers have difficulti­es in reaching the potential markets especially those away from Manila. This innovation will bring to poor farmers, groups and cooperativ­es the technology they need to yield better sales and marketabil­ity,” said Henk Hernans, general manager of East-West Seeds Philippine­s.

East-West Seeds, founded in 1982, has become one of the leading plant breeding specialist­s in Southeast Asia.

It focuses on small farmers, who represent 85 percent of the world’s food producers.

The Innovation Olympics drew teams from the University of the Philippine­s in Los Baños, AIM, De La Salle University and Ateneo de Manila University.

 ?? —CARMELA REYES-ESTROPE ?? CHAMPIONS The innovators who conceived “e-magsasaka” pose with East-West Seeds Philippine­s general manager Henk Hernans, (sixth from left) and Dexter Difuntorum, the group’s mentor, when they were awarded a ceremonial check for winning the first...
—CARMELA REYES-ESTROPE CHAMPIONS The innovators who conceived “e-magsasaka” pose with East-West Seeds Philippine­s general manager Henk Hernans, (sixth from left) and Dexter Difuntorum, the group’s mentor, when they were awarded a ceremonial check for winning the first...

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