German multinational company Bayer CropScience, one of the
global leaders in hybrid rice seeds will be launching in the
next two years, two new high-yielding rice seed varieties in
the Philippines.
The company's local unit, Bayer CropScience Philippines
said ongoing local trials in selected sites show very encouraging
results.
"We are confident that these two new varieties will
be well-received in the market as have our existing hybrid
rice seeds that are steadily getting a bigger chunk of the
market," said Carlos Saplala, country manager of Bayer
CropScience.
Saplala said the company will commercialize in 2007, the
production and distribution of Arize H-64 while a still unnamed
variety that is resistant to the dreaded bacterial leaf blight
(BLB) disease will be introduced in 2008.
"The new Arize H-64 is an improved version of our existing
Arize variety. It has shorter-maturity period and longer
slender grains and is slightly aromatic," said Saplala,
noting that trials have shown that the new variety can yield
up to 7.7 metric tons or 115 cavans per hectare which is
15 to 20 percent more compared to traditional inbred rice
seed varieties sold in the local market.
On the other hand, the BLB-resistant variety which is still
varying conditions, also show promising prospects in terms
of significantly reducing the risks for farmers.
"The risks are greatly reduced for farmers in terms
of yield loss, especially in the more vulnerable stages of
production," said Saplala, adding that BLB infected
rice farms can suffer yield loss of as much as 30 percent.
In the Philippines, the BLB perennially plague rice farms,
especially during the wet season. BLB is also recognized
as the second most dreaded rice diseases of rice worldwide.
Infected rice seedlings wilt and roll up, turning grayish-green
to yellow, until the whole seedling dies while those that
survive are stunted and yellowish with poor yields.
Saplala said the introduction of new varieties dovetails
with the company's goal of increasing its presence not only
in the Philippines, but also in the Asian region.
In last week's opening of the company's second conditioning
plant in Tagum City in Davao del Norte, Saplala said the
company will be investing more on the construction of additional
seed conditioning and storage plants nationwide.
"Aside from the hybrid rice seed conditioning facility,
three major seed storage facilities will be put up this year
in the Visayas, Central Luzon and Southern Tagalog. We are
already producing quality hybrid rice seeds, but we need
additional storage facilities to ensure that we keep the
integrity of our seeds intact upon reaching their destinations
so that farmers can expect to get the yield that they should
be getting," said Saplala.
The P10-million, state-of-the-art facility has a processing
capacity of eight to 12 MT of hybrid seeds per day. It has
a storage capacity of 500 MT of seeds, equivalent to 33,000
hectares of hybrid rice planting materials at any given time.
It is equipped with a German electronic packing system, ensuring
efficient supply of the company's Arize Bigante seeds to
rice farmers in Visayas and Mindanao.
"The Philippines is very strategic to our company's
thrust to further consolidate our position in the hybrid
rice seeds business in Asia," said Damien Plan, Bayer
CropScience BioScience public affairs manager in Asia Pacific.
Plan disclosed the company which currently operates in 18
countries, including Latin America and the United States,
is mounting an aggressive expansion program to make its presence
felt in Asia.
"We are initially focusing on the Philippines and India
where we have and are establishing hybrid rice seed breeding
programs. We want to multiply ourselves by 10 in 10 years," said
Plan.
He said that this year, the company will also be putting
up similar hybrid rice seed programs, Vietnam, Indonesia
and Brazil. In 2007, it will be entering two major rice producers
and consumers - China and Bangladesh.
"The Philippines fits perfectly into our plan to dominate
the Asia Pacific market," said Plan, noting that Bayer
CropScience local unit, Bayer CropScience Philippines was
one of the first countries in the region that focused on
commercializing its high-yielding Arize Bigante hybrid rice
seeds.