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Title: Filipino Rice Farmers More Productive Than Thai Co


espatepeppen - May 2, 2008 02:38 PM (GMT)
Filipino rice farmers more productive than Thai counterparts - IRRI
05/02/2008 | 10:10 PM
LOS BANOS, Philippines - Hard to believe, but the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) said Friday that Filipino rice farmers are more productive than their Thai counterparts, even if Thailand is the world's largest rice-exporting country.

Dr. Robert Zeigler, IRRI director general, said Filipino farmers are more productive per hectare than Thai farmers “and this is not simply political talk from an international guest." The Philippines has been hosting the IRRI since the 1960s.

An IRRI statement said Filipino rice farmers are “already almost a ton a hectare more productive than Thai rice farmers."

It also said Filipino farmers generally use fewer pesticides than other Southeast Asian rice farmers.

Plus, it said that Filipinos’ texting prowess or “use of mobile phone technology" give them more access to rice farming information than their Asian counterparts.

IRRI said with a target of five tons per hectare, Filipino rice farmers will become the most productive in Southeast Asia, ahead of both Vietnam and Indonesia.

“And Thailand doesn’t even have to deal with typhoons," Zeigler said. The Philippines gets 19-20 typhoons per year.

IRRI said Philippines faces many geographical challenges, including its being an archipelago, not a land mass like Thailand. The Philippines also has no major river deltas.

Thailand, along with Myanmar, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, and China's Yunnan province, is irrigated by the Mekong River, the 12th longest river in the world and the 7th longest in Asia.

IRRI said the Philippines' being an Asian leader in the use of science and technology in agriculture will soon make its farmers benefit from flood tolerant rice to help them deal with typhoons.

President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, in a visit to IRRI here, inspected the new “climate-ready" rice varieties that are tolerant to heat, submerging, and salinity. These will survive the effects of climate change and would have higher yields.

IRRI's background paper on the rice crisis stated the following reasons for the rice shortage:

*More consumption than actual production;

*Declining annual growth yield, which has been “almost nil" in the major

* Rice-growers in Asia in the past six years;

*Little room for expansion for rice areas due to population
increase;

*Reduced public investment in agricultural research and development;

*Rising demand for rice in Africa, whose imports accounted for almost a third of the total world trade in rice;

*Economic growth in large countries like India and China;

*Deteriorated irrigation systems;

*Rising oil prices;

*Extreme weather; and

*Reoccurring pest outbreaks such as planthoppers. - GMANews.TV

rastaman™ - May 3, 2008 11:55 AM (GMT)
mas productive kita compare sa Thai's???

ngaa may rice shortage kita??

guess nyo abi??


sa akon lang..


IMO....

nagka rice shortage kita to cover-up the ZTE Broadband deal!!!


bati-on pa ang ZTE Broadband deal subong??

wala na ay??

tungod sang rice crisis....

wala naman ta rice shortage eh...

ginatago lang nila ang mga bugas para matabunan ang issue!!!

wise move by Gloria Arroyo.... *mad *mad *mad *mad

The KG - May 4, 2008 07:59 AM (GMT)
QUOTE (rastaman™ @ May 3 2008, 07:55 PM)
mas productive kita compare sa Thai's???

ngaa may rice shortage kita??

guess nyo abi??


sa akon lang..


IMO....

nagka rice shortage kita to cover-up the ZTE Broadband deal!!!


bati-on pa ang ZTE Broadband deal subong??

wala na ay??

tungod sang rice crisis....

wala naman ta rice shortage eh...

ginatago lang nila ang mga bugas para matabunan ang issue!!!

wise move by Gloria Arroyo.... *mad  *mad  *mad  *mad

damo sila farmers kag duta guro...ang productivity is based on how much 1 hectare can produce...basi sa pilipinas may 100 hectare ta sa thailand may 500 sila... :lol:

tapos dugangan pa gid na kurakot sa aton, kundi mga 50 hectares nalang ang productive

qwikqwik - May 4, 2008 11:45 AM (GMT)
kay gna prefer sng gobyerno ang mag export sng bugas kay dako ang kickback...

:( :angry: :chuck:

Borbor - May 6, 2008 12:32 PM (GMT)
to be a good leader kinahanglan wise ka gd kung sa illongo pa MARU^ MARU^
ara gd na ky gloria..mas mayu nalang na sa kaysa sa currupt na presidente MANGu-MAngu pa...

@topic tu-od guro na mas productive ang pinoy galing dutay nalang sbung ang rice farm sa pilipinas. sakto hambal ni migo KG 100 hectares aton 500 ila

chram - May 7, 2008 02:49 AM (GMT)
pwede ta di ipapilit nga topiko hu!!

Government asked to rethink extension of agrarian program



Melody M. Aguiba

The government should rethink its agrarian reform policy if it has to raise food production as this socially "popular" system has only widened Philippines’ rich- poor gap and pushed back agricultural production.


The country has remained backward in its agricultural practice and antiquated in its farm equipment since a three-to-five hectare land, even if appearing to be fully owned by farmers, can never generate operational efficiencies, economies of scale, and maximum land productivity.

"We should stop romanticizing agriculture, thinking of ‘land for the landless,’ study very well before extending the program. A bill is extending the agrarian reform program is pending in Congress.

The world average for corn yield is at six tons (per hectare), we’re only at two. Land reform has not been effective for us. It has not raised our production," said Ric M. Pinca, former vice president of the Philippine Association of Feed Millers Inc. (Pafmi).

Prevailing in the country for more than 20 years now, the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law (CARL), passed in the late 1980s under the administration of President Corazon Aquino, has been blamed for many plantation crops’ failure in the country. Among these are rubber, banana, pineapple, and abaca.

Pinca said what the Philippines needs to produce more is to give incentives to land ownership and from there raise yield through mechanization.

"In the US, average farmer land (for corn) is 2,000 acres (809 hectares), and it’s fully mechanized. Here, we have three to five hectares. You can’t mechanize three to five hectares," he said.

With bigger land ownership comes the incentive of capital build-up, investments in land preparation equipment (tractors), good seeds, fertilizers and pesticides, combine harvester (with corn on the cob as product), and post harvest and modern silo and storage facilities.

Mariano Cordero, Asian Development Bank consultant, said land reform may appear to be pro-poor since it distributes land to poor farmers. But land reform has never empowered the Filipino poor since his agrarian reform land can never be used to generate capital for buying seeds and other inputs.

"We are romanticists for land reform. But farmers can never mortgage their land to banks. And why will banks accept a collateral that they can’t foreclose?" he said.

Cordero explains that to make a corn land productive, mechanization is pertinent. A tractor that plows a 12-inch depth can never be equalled by a draft animal that can only plow half as deep. A corn plant needs this depth so that its root system can dig deeper to receive more moisture and nutrients.

Mechanical planters can plant up to 70,000 hills per hectare compared to manual planting’s 30,000 hills, and modern storage facilities can extend corn’s shelf life, produce quality, aflatoxin-free corn, and save 10 to 15 percent of post harvest loss.

Pinca said the Philippines should take these times when food supply is at critical levels as opportunity to dream bigger.

"The country should think big. We should look at increased production which could only come from large farms. You can’t go small and expect to produce big in agriculture. You can’t turn farm workers into investors," he said.



http://www.mb.com.ph/BSNS20080507123809.html




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