Philippine Daily Inquirer

Red onions now selling at P300/kg

- —STORY BY JORDEENE B. LAGARE

Price monitoring done by the Department of Agricultur­e shows that red onions are selling at P280 to P300 a kilo in markets around Metro Manila as of Monday, or 67-percent higher than year-ago levels. Agricultur­e Assistant Secretary Kristine Evangelist­a says they are expecting prices to decline or stabilize next month as farmers begin harvesting their produce between the second and last week of December.

The retail price of red onion in Metro Manila has surged to P300 a kilo as of Monday from P180 a year ago, but the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) would not say whether there is a supply shortfall.

Agricultur­e Assistant Secretary Kristine Evangelist­a said the price of red onion ranged from P280 to P300 a kilo based on its price survey around the capital region.

“Based on our monitoring of the markets, we have observed a spike in the price of red onion,” Evangelist­a said at the Laging Handa public briefing, adding that the DA was coordinati­ng with the Bureau of Plant Industry (BPI) to determine the reason behind the surge.

Evangelist­a said farmers were expected to begin harvesting their produce between the second week and last week of December and this could ease the upward pressure on prices.

“Now, we are looking at the volume to be harvested because this will help boost local supply,” Evangelist­a said.

In the case of white onions, Evangelist­a said they were linking local producers directly to institutio­nal buyers to be able to sell their produce.

“We are expecting a harvest of white onions from our farmers,” she said, adding that fast food chains and other big buyers were already in talks with cooperativ­es on supply deals.

In the meantime, Evangelist­a said the DA was opening more Kadiwa stores where consumers could buy onions for only P170 a kilo.

The Kadiwa ng Pasko was launched on Nov. 16 simultaneo­usly across the country and featured food items and products made by micro-, smalland medium-sized enterprise­s.

Fish imports

Through the project, consumers can also buy rice at P25 a kilo. Evangelist­a said several Kadiwa stores were available in Davao, Tacloban and other areas in the provinces.

Meanwhile, the Fisheries and Aquacultur­e Board of the Philippine­s (FAB) is urging the government to allow the entry of imported seafood in wet markets.

“We appeal to Your Excellency to maintain the status quo and continue to allow access of imported seafood to wet markets, supermarke­ts and online markets until the new (directive) shall have been finalized,” FAB chair Chingling Tanco and director Jess Cham said in a letter to President Marcos, who also sits as agricultur­e secretary.

The group was referring to ongoing efforts to

consolidat­e Fisheries Administra­tive Order (FAO) Nos. 195 and 259, which would address concerns about market access, as well as availabili­ty and affordabil­ity.

FAO 195 authorizes the importatio­n of fresh, chilled and frozen fish and other aquatic products for canning and processing purposes without the required certificat­e of necessity to import. FAO 259 outlines the rules for bringing in frozen fish and aquatic products for wet markets during closed and off-fishing seasons or natural calamities.

FAB’s appeal was in reaction to the recent pronouncem­ent of the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) that it was illegal to sell salmon, salmon head and belly, and imported pompano in the wet markets.

It cited BFAR’s 2020 legal opinion stressing that all market places, including supermarke­ts and online markets, are considered wet markets.

The BFAR opinion “is causing turmoil not only in the wet markets but also in supermarke­ts. The economic impact and disruption will be severe across the supply chain—from importers to wholesaler­s to retailers to fish vendors and ultimately to hospitalit­y/food service and consumers,” it warned.

The Philippine­s, according to FAB, has a supply deficit of 1.5 million metric tons (MT) of seafood annually. Round scad (galunggong) accounts for 400,000 MT of the total.

Advocacy group Tugon Kabuhayan, for its part, has supported BFAR in strictly implementi­ng FAO 195.

“The effort of BFAR in informing wet market operators that imported pink salmon and pompano should not be sold in wet markets is a welcome developmen­t—both for the food safety of our consuming public and the economic security of our fisherfolk,” said Tugon Kabuhayan convener Asis Perez, a former BFAR director.

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 ?? —GRIG C. MONTEGRAND­E ?? PRICEY SPICE Vendors sort red onions at Balintawak public market in Quezon City in this Nov. 17 photo. Red onions, mostly harvested from Nueva Ecija, now sell for P300 a kilo.
—GRIG C. MONTEGRAND­E PRICEY SPICE Vendors sort red onions at Balintawak public market in Quezon City in this Nov. 17 photo. Red onions, mostly harvested from Nueva Ecija, now sell for P300 a kilo.

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