The Department of Agriculture (DA) said it will prioritize
29 provinces for the planting of hybrid rice as it aims for
increased farm output and a consequent higher income for farmers.
DA Secretary Arthur Yap said the department based its selection
of focus provinces on the presence of extensive irrigation systems
and track records of comparatively better yields in the last
three years of using hybrid rice.
"In limiting the planting of hybrid rice in selected provinces,
the DA will be able to rationalize the financial resources spent
for the program while getting a higher per-hectare yield in
the process," the official stressed. He said this is definitely
better than spreading out thinly the government resources for
the program.
"While the DA does not discourage farmers from the nonfocus
areas to plant hybrid rice, based on the last three year's production
record, a uniform high yield cannot be expected by farmers especially
from the nonfocus provinces. If the farmer fails to achieve
the projected high yield, it may affect the government's objective
to propagate planting of hybrid rice seeds," Yap said.
A total of 214,000 hectares in the 29 selected provinces will
be planted with hybrid rice for the May-October wet cropping
season.
Based on the average 5.9-metric ton per hectare yield, a total
of 1.2 million metric tons is projected to be harvested from
the focus provinces.
"Hybrid-rice planting in these 29 provinces is in the
line the government's goal to reduce the prices of wage goods
especially rice - through further productivity enhancement,"
Yap stressed.