Philippine Daily Inquirer

RECORD LEVEL OF RICE IMPORTS SEEN THIS YEAR

- By Karl R. Ocampo @kocampoINQ

The Philippine­s may see the biggest volume of rice imports this year at 4 million metric tons (MT) following the passage of the rice import liberaliza­tion bill.

Acting Administra­tor Tomas Escarez of the National Food Authority (NFA) said on Monday the agency had already received more than 200 applicatio­ns from prospectiv­e traders and importers.

The overall volume from these applicatio­ns is seen to reach 2 million MT, 20 percent of which has already arrived in the country.

In addition, listed AgriNurtur­e Inc. (ANI) president and CEO Antonio Tiu confirmed to the Inquirer that its deal with Vinafood II, Vietnam’s largest grains exporter, would still push through this year.

The exporter agreed to exclusivel­y supply ANI annually with 2 million MT of long grain rice valued

close to $1 billion.

In a text message, Tiu said the company was only waiting for the law’s implementi­ng rules and regulation­s before it would submit an applicatio­n. It plans to directly sell the staple to the market.

Under the recently signed Rice Import Liberaliza­tion Act, importers need to secure only a permit from the Bureau of Plant Industry and pay a 35and 50-percent tariff for imports from Southeast Asian countries and non-Asean countries, respective­ly.

If the imports push through, the total volume will surpass the highest recorded rice imports in the country during the Arroyo administra­tion at 2.34 million MT.

Unlike in Vietnam and Thailand where farmers can produce a kilo of rice at P6, Fil- ipino farmers spend P12 a kilo.

Reports from the Philippine Advisory Farmers Board showed the farm-gate price of palay has already declined to P14 a kilo in some rice-producing provinces. Meanwhile, in the country’s rice granaries, the recorded farm-gate price for palay was at P18-P19 a kilo.

Based on the Philippine Statistics Authority’s price monitoring report, the average farm-gate price of palay as of the first week of February was at P19.70 a kilo. This was the fifth consecutiv­e week of a price downtrend.

However, Agricultur­e Secretary Emmanuel Piñol said on his Facebook page that the falling price of palay was not due to the recently enacted law but due to “speculatio­n fueled by the anticipate­d ’flooding’ of the market with cheap imported rice.”

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