BusinessMirror March 28, 2021

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A broader look at today’s business

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Sunday, March 28, 2021 Vol. 16 No. 168

P25.00 nationwide | 4 sections 24 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK

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Caraga Region revs up crop and livestock production amid growing pandemic demand

D

By Manuel T. Cayon

AVAO CITY—Production of staple grains and other major crops has been intensified in the Caraga Region, even amid Covid -19 restrictions, when urban centers reeled heavily from the scarcity and rising prices of available food supply.

The revitalized agriculture assistance is also significant to the region, long acknowledged as the timber capital of Mindanao, although much of wood-based products are currently concentrated in tree plantations and calls have been renewed to protect the remaining secondarygrowth forests. In 2016, egg production got a technical boost from the assistance of an Aboitiz-subsidiary firm and a year later, the region’s planners joined a Mindanao study tour on the fisheries industry in coastal Infanta, Quezon, “to generate benchmark information on designing value-chain ventures for the different fisheries sectors across Mindanao.” In 2017, the World Bank-funded Philippine Rural Development Program granted the processing and marketing proposal of the Bayugan Rubber Producers Cooperative in the towns of La Paz, Espe-

ranza, Talacogon and Prosperidad in Agusan del Sur; and the regional office of the Department of Agriculture sent 53 farmers to undergo the Kapatid Agri Mentor Me Program, a coaching and mentoring facility for agriculture enterprise to sustain and scale up the farming business of farmers. Since 2008, the Department of Agriculture (DA) said, it has assisted and monitored the operation of 31 barangay food terminals, 11 municipal food terminals, two organic agriculture trading posts, one Agri-Pinoy trading center and four rice processing centers in the region. “These 49 business hubs have been operated by farmer associations and cooperatives supported by the office,” it said. The assistance—in the form of direct distribution of seeds, farm inputs and machineries, training and short-course learning—was sustained in the next years, halted

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 48.6310

abruptly, albeit briefly, by the restriction of movement during the pandemic. But as soon as the nation learned to devise ways to keep food supply going, farm production resumed immediately.

was actually a deceleration from the previous year (6.03 percent in 1999) and it was because of the slowdown of the performance of the agriculture, fishery and forestry sectors.

Not rivals

AMID the pandemic last year, P42.38 million was granted to 15 accredited rice-based farmers’ cooperatives and associations in Agusan del Norte and Butuan City. This was distributed by DACaraga Regional Director Abel James I. Monteagudo and Director Baldwin G. Jallorina of the DA’s Philippine Center for Postharvest Development and Mechanization (PhilMech). The equipment consisted of 13 four-wheel tractors, 11 hand tractors, 18 floating tillers, six rice-combine harvesters, two walkbehind transplanters, three ridingtype transplanters and one precision seeder. DA-PhilMech said farm mechanization can lower the cost of cultivating palay (unhusked rice) by P1 to P2 per kilo. At present, the cost of producing a kilo of palay in the Philippines is P12 per kilo, while it is P6 in Vietnam and P8 in Thailand. PhilMech also handed out P150.1 million worth of rice production and postharvest machinery and equipment to 53 accredited rice-based farmers’ cooperatives and associations in Surigao del Sur. Monteagudo said his office

THE two economic sectors—agriculture and forestry—may be occasionally deemed rivals in terms of utilization of available land, but Caraga region appears to blend the two together, enough to propel it to an outstanding performance in terms of regional output. Government monitors show this northeastern Mindanao region contributing 8.01 percent in 1998, 8.25 percent in 1999 and 8.29 percent in 2000 to the gross regional domestic product (GRDP) of Mindanao during these years. In the same period, the region’s economic growth accelerated faster and outpaced other regions in Mindanao, hitting 5.42 percent in the years 1999 and 2000, second only to Southern Mindanao Region, which posted 6.06-percent growth. The Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry sector was the leading contributor to the region’s GRDP in 2000, placed at P14.336 billion, higher than its 1999 performance of P13.599 billion. To further illustrate the important contribution of these two sectors, the regional economic performance in 2000 (5.42 percent)

Machinery and technology support

also built the region’s first monolithic dome in San Francisco, Agusan del Sur. This is a cold storage facility to keep the freshness of perishable food such as vegetables and fruits by slowing down the deterioration process and extend its shelf life for several weeks. “This is like a production facility where the harvest is packed and stored in a disaster-resistant structure,” Monteagudo pointed out. The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported that Agusan del Sur’s 2019 production of 10,459.30 metric tons contributed 70 percent of Caraga’s vegetable production. Assistance also came in the form of electronic media learning for the DA’s Smart Rice Agriculture. The DA-Agricultural Training Institute and Philippine Rice Research Institute-Agusan conducted the Unified School-on-the-Air Program on Smart Rice Agriculture (SOA-SRA), from March 9 to 12, to reach a target of 3,000 farmers in municipalities and cities with average yields of less than four tons per hectare in the region. “Tapping radio as a medium is a strategic and creative solution of the department to the massive information and educational needs of farmers. Radio also amplifies the limited reach of agricultural extension workers and stands as a practical platform during a pandemic such as Covid-19,” Monteagudo said.

Aside from technology, the DA distributed direct financial assistance to hard-up farmers to ensure that they work up their farms during the pandemic. For example, the Special Area for Agricultural Development (SAAD) Program in Bislig City, Surigao del Sur, allotted P58.3 million to assist groups like the Goat Raisers Association of Sitio Sanyata (GRASS) and the Chicken Raisers Association of Burboanon (CRAB), recipients of the 2019 Goat and Chicken Production Projects at Barangay San Roque and Barangay Burbuanan, Bislig City. As of January 2021, GRASS reported 13 goat stocks (10 does, two bucks, and a kid). The group also sells their goats’ manure to earn additional income. CRAB, on the other hand, has yet to sell its poultry products. They only received their 180 chickens in December 2020. This year, CRAB will receive poultry production materials and drugs and biologics worth P251,050. The regional DA has also set aside P161 million for different agriculture interventions to rice farmers this year in Agusan del Norte, Agusan del Sur, and Surigao del Sur. Livestock and poultry raisers also received assistance as the DA gave P1.4 million worth of animals in November last year. It said animal stock comprised: 400 heads of free-range chicken for eight farmer Continued on A2

n JAPAN 0.4456 n UK 66.8336 n HK 6.2599 n CHINA 7.4274 n SINGAPORE 36.0577 n AUSTRALIA 36.8672 n EU 57.2387 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.9683

Source: BSP (March 26, 2021)


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