Reacting to complaints from local farmers, the Department of Agriculture
(DA) is tightening the rules on the entry of imported vegetables.
Agriculture Secretary Leonardo Q. Montemayor said the DA will be rigidly
enforcing Republic Act 8800 or the Safeguard Measures Act that seeks to
protect local agriculture products from the entry of competing imported
commodities.
As part of the effort to control the inflow of imported vegetables, the
Vegetable Industry Stakeholders in Benguet which accounts for the majority
of vegetables being sold in Metro Manila, will work closely with the DA
Central and DA-Cordillera Autonomous Region field unit top undertake
market intelligence and monitoring activities to make sure trading
malpractices are reported to proper authorities.
Despite the influx of imported vegetables, Montemayor estimated that the
volume was brought in so far, is only 0.17 percent of total
vegetable demand of the country.
"A review of the Department of Agriculture and Bureau of Plant
Industry quarantine records on quarantine import permit issuance indicate
that a small volume of vegetables for the month of July and August were
sourced from Australia, the Netherlands and China," Montemayor said.
For the first nine months of the year, the country imported 267 metric
tons of semi-temperature vegetables from Australia and the US.
The biggest importers were Rustans Supermarket, Leysan Commercial, Santag
Commodities, Australasia Food and Beverage Corporation, Wendenberg
International, the Asian Development Bank Commissary, Philippine Airlines
Tuckerbag Inc., Australia Prime, Macro Asia Eurest, Pacific Alliance, Blue
Dairy Corporation, AFPC Property Ltd., and Mount Zion Express.
Montemayor said the importers brought in at least 37 kinds of
semi-temperate vegetables such as carrots, broccoli, lettuce,
cabbage, cauliflower, celery, potato and mushroom, directly competing with
local produce.
Rustan's brought in about five tons of carrots during the period or 82
percent of total registered carrot imports, 74 percent of total potato
imports; 42 percent of leeks, 45 percent of cabbage, 52 percent of
mushrooms and 22 percent of total cauliflower imports.
The ADB commissary was also a regular importer as it had to meet the food
requirements of the bank's multiracial staff and their dependents.
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