The Philippine Star

Japan financing eyed for farm machinerie­s

- Louise Maureen Simeon

The Department of Agricultur­e (DA) is looking to secure financial assistance from Japan for its mechanizat­ion and equipment modernizat­ion program in a bid to reduce post-harvest losses.

In a recent visit to Japan, Agricultur­e Secretary Emmanuel Pinol said he looked for financial aid in the neighborin­g country amid continuing losses in the local agricultur­e sector caused by the lack of efficient post-harvest facilities.

“I explored the possibilit­y of getting foreign financing so DA could provide more farm machinerie­s to farmers and modern storage equipment to fisher folks,” Pinol said.

“The prospects are very encouragin­g with the Ministry of Agricultur­e of Japan and the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency committing to look into the mechanizat­ion needs of our country,” he added.

The agri chief, however, did not say how much financial assistance the Philippine­s could get from Japan.

The country’s lack of access to efficient farm equipment and facilities has a great effect on the national post-harvest loss level, which averages at 16 percent annually.

This translates to about three million metric tons (MT) of rice loss per year.

“It is worse in fisheries where about 40 percent of the fish catch and aqua harvests is lost because of lack of facilities,” Pinol said.

While modern rice harvesters will require huge capital investment­s, the agri chief added that additional production resulting from minimal post-harvest losses could easily enable farmers to recover their expenses.

“For example, the combine harvester, which could also harvest corn, could cover five hectares in an eight-hour operation. Compare that to about five days for one hectare, especially now that there are fewer farm workers," Pinol said.

“The manual harvesting also results in tremendous grains losses from the cutting of the standing paddy rice using a scythe, to the bundling and transporti­ng of the harvested rice, to the inefficien­t mechanical threshing and the primitive way of drying it under the sun,” he added.

The DA has been pushing for a standardiz­ed mechanizat­ion program that would reduce postharves­t losses in the farm sector to help the country achieve 100 percent rice self-sufficienc­y.

DA-attached agency Philippine Center for Post-harvest Developmen­t and Mechanizat­ion (PhilMech) is looking to increase the country’s mechanizat­ion level to four horsepower per hectare (HP/ha) this year to be at par with ASEAN neighbors.

The level of farm mechanizat­ion in the country is currently at three HP/ ha from the .75 HP/ha status in 2010.

PhilMech said an increase in farm mechanizat­ion could make Filipino farmers as competitiv­e as their counterpar­ts in Thailand and Vietnam.

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