Sun Star Bacolod

Negocc reaffirms goal to enhance market potential for organic products

- BY TERESA D. ELLERA

“WE ARE looking at going mainstream with the establishm­ent of organic hubs.”

This was stressed by Provincial Agricultur­ist Ed mundo Raul Causing on the sidelines of the opening of the 15th Negros Island Organic Farmers Festival at the Provincial Capitol Grounds in Bacolod City yesterday, November 23.

In fact, organic farms in the province have widened to 2,000 hectares, he added.

Running until Novem 26, the festival is participat­ed by 80 organizati­ons and individual­s who are into organic farming.

Governor Eugenio Jose Lacson, in a message read by Third District Board Member Andrew Monteliban­o, who chairs the Sanggunian­g Panlalawig­an’s Committee on Agricultur­e, said the province is conscious of the urgency to pursue organic farming.

Negros Occidental, he said, has endeavored for

its advancemen­t and practice and because of that it has earned several national awards over the years including the “Performing Organic Agricultur­al Province.”

“As we open the 15th Negros Island Organic Farmers Festival after a hiatus due to the pandemic, we reaffirm our goal to enhance the market potential of our organic products,” he said.

Organic agricultur­e needs not be limited to mere production, it has to be enhanced by entreprene­urship and it has to be a viable source of income, Lacson also said.

The governor also underscore­d that he delivered the Annual State of the Children’s Report a week ago where he renewed the generation’s commitment to the Negrense children, to empower and usher them to the future.

“However, the present modern world is faced with a great deal of challenges,” Lacson admitted, as he cited climate change and the destructio­n of natural habitat, gross inequality and poverty, food and water security, among others.

“As a matter of public policy and personal commitment, we must oblige to meet our needs without jeopardizi­ng the capacity of the future generation to meet their own needs,” the province’s top official added.

Moreover, under Section 2 of the Organic Agricultur­al Act of the Philippine­s, the promotion of the practice of organic agricultur­e will cumulative­ly condition and enrich the fertility of the soil, increase farm productivi­ty, reduce pollution and destructio­n of the environmen­t, prevent the depletion of natural resources, further

protect the health of farmers, consumers, and the general public, and save on imported farm inputs.

“It is time that we show the world that Negros is more than just sugar, that Negros is the place where you can succeed if you try, where a healthy economy can advance by what we make and innovate in a sustainabl­e manner,” he added.*

 ?? TDE PHOTO ?? THIS organic cassava or “kamote kahoy” from Kabankalan City is among the products being sold at the ongoing 15th Negros Island Organic Farmers Festival at the Provincial Capitol Grounds in Bacolod City yesterday, November 23▪
TDE PHOTO THIS organic cassava or “kamote kahoy” from Kabankalan City is among the products being sold at the ongoing 15th Negros Island Organic Farmers Festival at the Provincial Capitol Grounds in Bacolod City yesterday, November 23▪

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