Philippine Daily Inquirer

GLOBAL GLUT DRASTICALL­Y PULLS DOWN COPRA PRICES

- By Karl R. Ocampo @kocampoINQ

Local copra prices plunged by close to 50 percent year-onyear last week as the coconut industry continues to suffer from an oversupply in the world market.

Philippine Coconut Authority (PCA) administra­tor Romulo dela Rosa said the industry had now reached a “crisis point,” as the average farm gate price of the commodity has fallen to P19.09 a kilogram on Oct. 16 from P37.02 a kilo last year.

Crude coconut oil prices have also plummeted to $880 a ton from a high of $1,850 a ton during the comparativ­e period.

Dela Rosa said the industry badly needed government interventi­on as coconut farmers and farm workers are struggling under the weight of drasticall­y lower copra prices.

United Coconut Associatio­n of the Philippine­s Inc. chair Dean Lao noted that this year was a good year for coconut farmers “weather-wise,” but the same cannot be said in terms of their earnings given the glut in the world market where most of the local copra goes.

“Production this year is good but the market did not grow. We have to create more markets because prices keep falling down,” he said.

The Department of Agricultur­e and the Philippine Coconut Authority (PCA) are preparing a five-year road map for the revival of the coconut industry, considered one of the country’s top dollar earners.

“The PCA was directed to allocate P10 million for the drafting of the coconut industry road map in what could be considered as the first attempt by government to give focus on the industry which involves five million farming families,” Agricultur­e Secretary Emmanuel Piñol said in a Facebook post.

Aside from declining copra prices, other problems being faced by the industry include infestatio­n and slow replanting programs.

Piñol added that the “obsession on the coco levy fund issue ... virtually stalled all efforts to rehabilita­te and revive the coconut industry.”

Lao said they had already recommende­d the creation of more agricultur­al infrastruc­ture as well as new markets for the industry, to make it easier for farmers to be integrated in high-value markets especially overseas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines