03 December 2021

Forewarned PH Congress, Forearmed DA: To Meet Huge Challenges In 2022, DA Chief William Dar Seeks P12 B Higher Budget

I author know multiple & interconnected problems of Filipino farming families – and that they need all the help they can get. A farmer’s son, wide reader since 1957, an agriculturist (UPLB '65), and open-eyed self-taught blogger since 2000  – I am aware how can PH agriculture not only survive but thrive!

“We are entering a ‘New World’ – the global scale of the ‘new normal’ as an offshoot of the Covid-19 pandemic – wherein every country in the world is coping with huge challenges.” ANN says those are exact words from PH Secretary of Agriculture William Dar in his common letter to Senate President Vicente “Tito” Sotto III and House Speaker Lord Allan Velasco requesting an additional P12 Billion to next year’s DA budget (Author Not Named, 02 Dec 2021, “DA Requests P12 B More, On Top Of Proposed 2022 Budget, To Address Food, Agri Global Challenges[1],” DA.gov.ph). The P12 B is on top of the already-requested budget of P95 B for 2022.
(budget imag
e[2] from Asian Telegraph)

“(The huge challenges) include the lingering and mutating Covid-19 pandemic, increasing prices of petrol, fertilizers and feeds, climate change, population dynamics, urbanization and aging farmers, and preventing entry of transboundary animal and plant diseases,” Sec Dar wrote Senate President Tito Sotto and House Speaker Allan Velasco.

Let me enumerate the agricultural woes as Sec Dar stated them (excluding the pandemic):

(1)   Increasing prices of fuel, fertilizers & feeds

(2)   Climate change

(3)   Population dynamics

(4)   Urbanization & aging farmers

(5)   Entry of transboundary diseases of crops cultivated and animals raised.

I note that the more pressing problems for agriculture are #1 (increasing prices of inputs), #2 (climate change), and #5 (transboundary diseases of crops & animals). #1 decreases farmer earnings; #2 decreases farmer yields (and sometimes destroys whole harvests); and #5 sometimes decimates whole herds in an entire village or group of villages.

“These global challenges will continue to impact adversely on food production, distribution, and consumption next year and beyond,” Sec Dar said. “Hence, in the case of the Philippines and we at the Department of Agriculture, there is a felt need for bigger budgetary support.”

The additional DA budget has been requested, Sec Dar said, because “the country is in need of a ‘lifeline’ to sustain its productivity and meet its food security needs.”

Food security is always a prime national concern.

From the P12 B requested, P8.9 B is allotted as fertilizer subsidy, P2 B to the corn program; and P1.1 B to urban agriculture.

“We believe that there is an urgency for the government to support our farmers in dealing with these global and local challenges,” Sec Dar said. Take fertilizers. “The increase in prices of inorganic fertilizers due to the declining global supply has been alarming,” he said. “Big countries and producers have stocked up most of the fertilizer supply to ensure their local requirements for crop production and food security.”

If we do not assist our farmers who produce our food, who will?@517



[1]https://www.da.gov.ph/da-requests-p12-b-more-on-top-of-proposed-2022-budget-to-address-food-agri-global-challenges/?fbclid=IwAR3W4gvvFzh6XFRIZSHOZ1w8enf6vu6pWgHeErK2-X7ZaeJmRP3AmzniwYQ

[2]https://www.theasiantelegraph.net/budget-2021-22-and-agriculture-sector/

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