THE current skyrocketing cost of rice, agricultural crops
and LOS BAÑOS—Robert Zeigler, director general
of the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), says that
the Philippines is doing well to overcome the global food crisis
that threatens to spark civil unrest and make millions more
impoverished in the Third World.
Zeigler told the Philippine Daily Inquirer in an interview
at IRRI headquarters here in Laguna on Wednesday he had discussions
with Agriculture Secretary Arthur Yap last week on the rice
situation in the Philippines.
“We are in the late stages of developing an action
plan with the Department of Agriculture,” Zeigler said. “We
hope that Secretary Yap and I can finalize and can sign an
accord that will lay out the direction we should be taking.”
The talks came amid concern by economic and finance ministers
at the spring meeting of the World Bank and the International
Monetary Fund in Washington at the weekend over food shortages
that had sparked tensions in over 30 countries and threatened
to drive more than 100 million people in the developing world
deeper into poverty.
The cutbacks were blamed on climate change, booming populations,
new-found affluence that has put more food on the table in
China and India, conversion of grains into biofuels, natural
disasters in the United States, Australia and Bangladesh,
and export restrictions by rice producers.
Awareness of technology
Zeigler said the plan being hammered out with the agriculture
department would look at ways of meeting the future needs
of the Philippines as well as that of other rice-producing
countries.
“It goes from concerted efforts to make sure that
farmers are aware of and can use the latest techniques in
crop establishment all the way to making sure that social
safety nets are in place,” he said.
He said the plan called for improving agronomic practices,
enhancing the ability to utilize rice varieties more effectively,
promoting rice breeding and building training capacity.
“It’s to make sure that government policies
are in place that allow both farmers and consumers to benefit
from the production capacity and the prices.
“We invest in infrastructure, especially irrigation,
and finally to make sure that the safety nets are in place
such that the poorest of the poor aren’t left behind
in the case of the price spikes that we’re seeing now,” Zeigler
said.
Green revolution
The IRRI spearheaded the Asian Green Revolution in the 1960s
by developing high yielding “miracle rice” varieties.
The game plan is essentially to make rice available and
affordable, Zeigler said, adding that this has to be managed
carefully.
“I don’t think any government wants to see its
poorest people suffering starvation,” Zeigler said.
“This is a global problem, not just in the Philippines.
I read the papers in the Philippines and sometimes I get
the impression that there’s a lot of finger-pointing,
saying this is mismanagement by the government,” he
said.
3 steps
“
Every country has its problem. I don’t want to see
the Philippines being bashed when in fact many things are
being done well,” he said.
Zeigler referred to President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s
recent announcement that she would make available P40 billion
to improve rice production in the country.
“In our discussion with the Philippines on rice, it
is our hope that a significant amount of that P40 billion
that the President announced will go into getting technology
to the farmers, into research and into rehabilitation of
irrigation infrastructure.
“Those three steps can go a long way to reversing
the near-term and medium-term problems that we’re facing.
When that money comes on, I think there’s every reason
to believe that it can be used wisely,” Zeigler said.
Post-harvest losses
“
One of the things we hope will form part of that program
would be to improve how rice is handled post harvest and
reduce the post-harvest losses. If you can dry the rice properly,
store it properly, you can get more of what we harvest,” he
said.
“There’s a lot of technology out there we just
need to get to the farmers and maybe make some final adjustment
in the field,” the IRRI director general said.
Zeigler said the Philippines had “benefited quite
substantially” from the IRRI technology.
“If you look at the average yields in the Philippines
compared to say Thailand, actually they’re much higher.
So, the Philippines has, I think, relative to a number of
countries, adopted technologies quite effectively and used
them rather well,” he said.
RP has less rice land
Asked why the Philippines remains a rice importer, Zeigler
said that compared to countries like Thailand, Vietnam,
China, India and Burma, the Philippines has less land that
is suitable for rice production.
“It’s a mountainous country, many small islands.
It is difficult to move production around,” he said.
The country is on the typhoon track and gets hit by 15 to
20 typhoons annually and that takes its toll on rice production,
he said.
There’s also rapid population growth. “The Philippines
production has been growing very well except population has
been growing faster,” Zeigler said.
“These are the major reasons why the Philippines continues
to import rice. None of these is about the farmers not adopting
the technology. They do a good job,” he said.
The challenge
“
The question of food safety nets and making sure prices are
affordable by the poor and how to achieve that has been a
policy debate for many many years,” said Zeigler, referring
to subsidized rice being sold by the Philippine government-run
National Food Authority.
“We don’t want our populations to get hungry
and we don’t want the poorest to suffer the most. The
difficulty is how to make sure that the poorest and the neediest
receive the benefits of the program and that it doesn’t
distort what the farmers receive,” he said.
“That’s the challenge. How do you manage it.
I think the idea of safety nets is agreed to by most people.
It’s how you actually get it to work that’s the
challenge and you know it’s not a trivial matter. I
mean, even the wealthiest of countries have safety nets for
their people,” Zeigler said.