Philippine Daily Inquirer

DRY SPELL BRINGS FARM LOSSES TO P2.8B

Rice and corn farmers have borne the brunt of El Niño, which started more than a month ago and is expected to intensify in April. Among the hardest-hit regions are Bicol and Soccsksarg­en, officials say.

- By Karl R. Ocampo @kocampoINQ

Damage to agricultur­e caused by El Niño rose to P2.86 billion just more than a month after it struck the country, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council said on Wednesday.

The council said rice and corn farmers incurred the bulk of the losses.

Hardest hit were the regions of Soccsksarg­en and Bicol.

Officials have declared a state of calamity in the regions of Mimaropa, Zamboanga, Soccsksarg­en and the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao due to the worsening dry spell.

Other regions severely affected by El Niño are Calabar- zon, Western Visayas and Eastern Visayas.

The weather phenomenon will worsen next month, according to the Philippine Atmospheri­c, Geophysica­l and Astronomic­al Services Administra­tion (Pagasa).

Pagasa said 61 percent of the country would likely experience drought while 31 percent would likely experience a dry spell— leaving only 8 percent of the country not vulnerable to El Niño.

This means the country will have to brace for warmer weather and less chances of rainfall as the year progresses.

Farmer leader Jhun Pascua of the National Movement for Food Sovereignt­y said some farmers in Mindanao were already forced to sell their livestock as grassy areas

for grazing had disappeare­d.

Crops planted in parched lands were left to wilt as farmers had no way of irrigating them.

No definite water sources

In Bulacan province, Raul Montemayor of the Federation of Free Farmers said rice growers could not shift to planting other crops even if they wanted to because they had no definite water sources to rely on.

“There’s not enough government interventi­on, especially from the NIA (National Ir- rigation Administra­tion). Farmers who only know how to plant rice have no other option but to wait [for the drought to end],” Montemayor said.

Pilipina Bermudez, manager of the NIA Public Informatio­n Office, said the agency had the capacity to help only 1.5 million farmers in irrigating their lands—or just 14 percent of the country’s total agricultur­e workforce.

NIA focus

Asked whether the agency has the means to help areas that rely on rainwater for cultivatin­g land, Bermudez said the NIA could only focus on areas where it had available irriga- tion systems.

Of the 3.9 million hectares of rice farms in the country, 1.2 million ha benefit from communal irrigation systems while 2.7 million ha rely on rainwater, according to data from the Philippine Statistics Authority.

El Niño “is not something we could prevent,” Agricultur­e Secretary Emmanuel Piñol said in an interview.

He said all the agricultur­e department could do “is to pick up the pieces afterward and provide interventi­ons.”

Piñol has been pushing for the constructi­on of solar-powered irrigation systems (SPIS) all over the country to ensure the availabili­ty of water allyear round. But with limited funding, it is proceeding at a snail’s pace.

Israeli loan

But just recently, the Department of Agricultur­e secured a long- term loan from the Israeli government to construct 6,200 units of SPIS for P44 billion. The units have the capacity to irrigate half a million hectares of farmlands.

“This is something we have long neglected and ignored: irrigation. We are repeating again and again that if we do not irrigate, if we do not conserve water or manage our wa- ter, we will suffer from this problem year after year,” Piñol said.

For now, Aurelio Estrada of Unyon ng mga Manggagawa sa Agrikultur­a said his group was encouragin­g farmers to avail themselves of government loans, insurance and other forms of financial assistance to withstand El Niño, which is expected to linger until the end of the year.

“There are so many areas affected by El Niño now, and we can just do so much. There needs to be a concerted effort between farmer groups and local government units to address the problem,” Estrada said.

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