China Daily Global Weekly

Philippine rice program breeds closer ties

Manila looks to Chinese expertise in hybrid strains to produce more per hectare, cut costs and improve earnings

- By PRIME SARMIENTO in Hong Kong prime@chinadaily­apac.com

Arice-breeding program between China and the Philippine­s, although not as widely publicized as big-ticket infrastruc­ture projects, has become one of the most significan­t hallmarks of the two countries’ cooperatio­n.

China is the world’s pioneer in hybrid rice technology, which allows the country to feed its growing population despite the fact that the nation has only 7 percent of the world’s arable land.

It has promoted the technology to other countries, including the Philippine­s.

Hybrid rice is produced by the crosspolli­nation of two varieties, with the product of this crossbreed­ing being a high-yielding seed. Some of these hybrid varieties are also resistant to pests and diseases.

For nearly two decades, the Philippine-Sino Center for Agricultur­al Technology, or PhilSCAT, has been testing and developing high-yielding rice varieties. According to experts, cultivatin­g hybrid seeds is one of the ways in which the Philippine­s can attain its goal of national rice self-sufficienc­y.

Emmanuel Sicat, the center’s director, said: “We want to develop hybrid seed varieties to help farmers increase their harvests.”

The center is based in the northern Philippine province of Nueva Ecija — the country’s rice granary. It was establishe­d in 2000 through a $5 million grant from China, with the Philippine government providing an estimated $2.9 million.

In 2018, China committed to extending a 27.52 million yuan ($3.93 million) grant to PhilSCAT, according to the Philippine Department of Finance. This agreement was sealed through an exchange of letters on the sidelines of the annual Boao Forum for Asia in Hainan province.

Sicat said PhilSCAT has developed four varieties that have passed the Philippine rice cooperativ­e tests and are ready for the market.

One of the best-known of these is Mestiso 38, which has the potential to produce 12 metric tons of rice per hectare — three times the Philippine national average.

Sicat said that in addition to developing its own varieties, PhilSCAT has identified parental varieties from China that are suitable for the Philippine soil.

In 2000, Chinese-Filipino businessma­n Henry Lim Bon Liong ventured into the hybrid rice business, and his SL Agritech Corp, or SLAC, is now among the leading developers of hybrid seeds in the Philippine­s. The company’s flagship product, SL-8H, can produce as much as 14 tons per hectare.

Lim credits Yuan Longping, the Chinese agronomist who developed the world’s first hybrid rice in 1974, with helping SLAC develop SL-8H.

“Hybrid rice has the potential to produce three to four times more, compared with ordinary inbred rice,” Lim said.

He added that farmers using SL8H “are producing more per hectare, allowing them to reduce the cost and consequent­ly increase their net profit”.

Ernesto Ordonez, chairman of the farmers’ coalition Alyansa Agrikultur­a, said the Philippine­s has learned a lot from China in terms of hybrid rice technology.

Ordonez, former undersecre­tary at the Philippine Department of Agricultur­e, said the country needs to devote more areas to hybrid seeds, as this will increase production and reduce the retail price of rice.

He said Manila only needs to invest 12,000 pesos ($237) for every 2 hectares of land sown with hybrid seeds. This is cheaper than spending nearly 1 million pesos per hectare to build irrigation facilities.

He said China, which has helped develop hybrid rice technology in the Philippine­s, has managed to increase its own production thanks to highyieldi­ng hybrid seeds.

Since the 1990s, the Philippine government’s flagship agricultur­al programs have promoted hybrid rice as a way to attain national self-sufficienc­y.

Philippine Agricultur­e Secretary William Dar said his department will allocate 2 billion pesos for hybrid rice production this year to raise output to 21 million tons, The Philippine Star newspaper reported.

According to a study by the Philippine Rice Research Institute and the Internatio­nal Rice Research Institute, promotion of hybrids by the government and the private sector has encouraged farmers to adopt this technology. From about 5,000 hectares in 2001, the area planted with hybrid seeds had risen to more than 300,000 hectares in 2015.

But such growth has since flattened out. The high cost of seeds and the fact that hybrids cannot be reused has dissuaded farmers from growing them.

Hazel Tanchuling, executive director of the think tank Rice Watch Action Network in Manila, said: “The issue is sustainabi­lity and farmers’ incomes.”

Tanchuling said that despite the extension of seed subsidies, it is still more costly to use hybrid seeds compared with inbred varieties. Hybrid seeds can also only be grown in irrigated areas.

However, Sicat from PhilSCAT said it is still important for the Philippine­s to develop and propagate hybrid seeds to ensure food security.

He said this is why the center also trains farmers to produce their own hybrid seeds to use and sell to others

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A farmer works in a rice field in Pinamalaya­n, Oriental Mindoro province, the Philippine­s.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A farmer works in a rice field in Pinamalaya­n, Oriental Mindoro province, the Philippine­s.
 ?? ROMEO RANOCO / REUTERS ?? Farmers use a threshing machine in a rice field in Calumpit town, Bulacan province, the Philippine­s.
ROMEO RANOCO / REUTERS Farmers use a threshing machine in a rice field in Calumpit town, Bulacan province, the Philippine­s.
 ?? DAVID GREEDY / GETTY IMAGES ?? Workers at the Internatio­nal Rice Research Institute sort grain for storage and planting at its headquarte­rs in Los Banos, the Philippine­s.
DAVID GREEDY / GETTY IMAGES Workers at the Internatio­nal Rice Research Institute sort grain for storage and planting at its headquarte­rs in Los Banos, the Philippine­s.

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