Foreword 2011 was our first full year together in the Department of Agriculture. I thank all of the members of the DA family for the support and cooperation necessary for us to achieve the results contained in this annual report. Likewise, let us acknowledge the energy and enthusiasm of the various agri-fishery stakeholders — farmers and fishers, private sector investors, and local government officials. Ang ating pagtutulungan ang nagsulong sa mga ani ng sektor ng agrikultura sa taong 2011. Our focus in 2011 was to put in place the elements of our Food Staples Sufficiency Program. This involved preparing and having the DA budget approved, particularly the provisions pertaining to front-loading investments in public goods: irrigation, farm-tomarket roads, and post-harvest facilities. During 2011, we proposed and obtained a 61% increase in the DA budget for 2012 – the highest allocation ever received by the Department. Our other big task was harnessing broad support for the program. For this, I personally reached out to as many of our constituents as possible and sought their support for the DA. We met with farmers and fishers, with governors, mayors, barangay officials, irrigators’ associations, the private sector, agrifishery councils, and other national and local agencies. Their cooperation in various initiatives like the Mindanao Rural Development Program, the early planting program in Central Luzon, the IRRI support for community seed banking, the Agrikulturang Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino, and other programs allowed us to forge ahead. In addition to achieving sufficiency in food staples, our Department is tasked to deliver the services from farm to table for all the commodities that we need to nurture, connect to markets and make available at affordable prices. To accomplish this, we need to invigorate the entire DA system. The Regional Field Units and our programs, our frontliners, deserve the full support of the service units delivering various functions — from regulation, extension, information, planning, finance, budgeting, and human resource development. We will continue improving the way we operate by being ready to listen and implement necessary changes. Further, we will continue to partner with farmers, fishers and livestock raisers, the private sector and local government units to maintain, if not further improve, the viability, quality and global competitiveness of our major agricultural, livestock and aquaculture and marine species. It includes keeping them free from the dreaded foot and mouth disease and avian influenza, and crop pests and diseases like mango pulp weevil, banana fusarium wilt, and abaca mosaic virus, among others. Aiming for a more bountiful harvest in 2012, I therefore invite you to strengthen our partnership on the programs we have rolled out in 2011 and in launching and vigorously implementing the other programs we have planned and will further develop together. Let this be our shared vision: Pagkaing sapat. Magsasaka at mamamayang angat. Tagumpay nating lahat!
Proceso J. Alcala Secretary
ii