Monday, February 28, 2011

Senator Villar Pushing for Agriculture Scholarships

FarmVillar
Villar Pushes Financial Aid for Agri Students


A bill has been filed aiming to provide scholarships to encourage more students to enroll in agricultural college courses.

Senator Manuel Villar Jr, author of the bill, wants the government to offer scholarships in agribusiness, forestry, fisheries, and veterinary medicine to attract more students to take them up.

The proposed Agri-Kabataan program will also fund graduate studies in environmental and marine sciences, hydrology, renewable energy, and agribusiness management programs.

"Agriculture as a profession has lost its attraction because of more lucrative job offers from other competing professions," Villar said, adding the lack of manpower in these fields has contributed to an underperforming agricultural sector.

The government will need a highly competent workforce to realize its declared commitment to modernize Philippine agriculture, he said.

"Opportunities in agriculture have to be created, developed, and made more lucrative to attract more students to enroll in agriculture courses," he said.

The Agri-Kabataan scholarships are aimed at graduates of agricultural and vocational high schools but will also offer assistance to college students already studying agriculture.

Besides study grants, the bill will include entrepreneurship and on-the-job training components in the curriculum for agriculture students.

Students will be sent to work at agribusiness ventures for 3-12 months at a time under a supervised farming schedule.

Villar's bill also sets aside P50 million as start-up capital for an agribusiness venture laboratory for students who seek to put up their own businesses.

By Sunstar

Senator Manuel Villar Jr Helping Philippine Farmers

We congratulate Senator Manuel Villar Jr on his vision and efforts to help support Philippine farmers have a better life through agriculture, and helping all Filipinos have enough food to eat each day. Success follows leadership . . . lead the way to success for the Philippines.

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Monday, February 21, 2011

Philippine Arabica Coffee Farming Opportunities

Coffee Beans
Canadian Firm Partners with XU to Revitalize Coffee Industry


The “coffee with a soul” is partnering with the Xavier University-Ateneo de Cagayan (XU Ateneo) to help revitalize the coffee industry in Mindanao and perhaps, the rest of the country.

Pierre Yves Cote, Rocky Mountain Café (RMC) president, whose coffee producers are indigenous peoples of various tribes all over the country, recently signed a memorandum of understanding with outgoing XU president, Rev. Fr. Jose Ramon Villarin, S.J., for the development and promotion of Arabica coffee in Mindanao.

The university can do this through developing at least 50 hectares of Arabica coffee plantation on XU properties; setting up a center to provide training to Mindanao Arabica coffee farmers; establishing a training program on the best practices in Arabica coffee farming and processing; and establishing a research program on Arabica coffee production and processing.

For its part, RMC will also provide thesis support grants to XU undergraduate and graduate degree students; create a joint laboratory that specializes in finding solutions to the problems of Arabica coffee farmers in Mindanao; promote entrepreneurship by setting up RMC coffee kiosks and franchises on the XU campus; and provide job opportunities to XU graduates.

“Rocky Mountain Café is a Canadian company that wants to revolutionize the coffee industry in the Philippines,” Cote said during the Feb. 9 launch of Café Ateneo, which retails RMC’s coffee.

Café Ateneo’s launching was part of the program of activities for Social Consciousness Month of XU’s Research and Social Outreach (RSO). Café Ateneo is part of the Student Entrepreneurship Program (SEP) of RSO which seeks to promote entrepreneurship among the students by establishing enterprises that can serve as business laboratories for both business and nonbusiness students.

While serving as a training ground for future full-fledged entrepreneurs, Café Ateneo aims to expand the food and dining options of the university community. The café serves specialty coffee provided by RMC. With a temporary location at the Science Center building, the Café is convenient for students who may not have enough time to go to the cafeteria or a farther location for a snack in between classes. Tables and chairs are provided for chitchats or serious discussions that go well with coffee.

RSO hopes to make Café Ateneo more than just a snack bar but a hotbed of intellectual discourse.

Dr. Hilly Roa-Quiaoit, XU vice president for RSO, said that XU’s partnership with RMC will help boost the university’s research and outreach arm to help the community.

Quiaoit said the partnership with RMC is part of RSO’s program of providing food security to farmers.

RMC and XU can do this by “helping the farmers in Bukidnon in coffee production,” she said.

RMC is now setting up a 50-hectare Arabica coffee plantation in Miarayon, Talakag, Bukidnon.

The Bukidnon plantation, set for inauguration soon, is the fifth plantation that RMC has set up all over the country as part of its thrust of helping the Philippines regain its ranking among the 77 coffee-producing countries in the world. RMC is targeting to establish 10 plantations  in 10 provinces from Luzon to Mindanao, with 100,000 Arabica coffee trees in each plantation for a total of one million Arabica coffee trees nationwide.

The Philippines is currently ranked 76th in the world in terms of coffee production, a very far cry from its third-place ranking two decades ago.

“The coffee industry in the Philippines declined because the industry focused on making instant coffee and planting Robusta coffee, which is low-grade coffee,” Cote said.

He said the Bukidnon plantation is targeted to be RMC’s main production unit in this part of Mindanao. RMC also has another plantation in Mindanao, located in Kiamba, Sarangani province.

Having tasted Philippine Arabica coffee during its heyday, Cote, a French-Canadian married to a Filipina, has called the Philippines home for the last 20 years. He helped established the RMC in 2006 to help revitalize the country’s coffee industry.

“Coffee is selling today at double the price it was selling six months ago. If only Filipino coffee farmers are growing Arabica, they will have three times more money from Arabica than they’re earning from Robusta,” he said.

Misamis Oriental Governor Oscar Moreno confirmed Cote’s claim.

Moreno narrated an incident in Bal-ason, Gingoog City years ago where coffee farmers light their cigarettes using paper money from the sale of their coffee. The same farmers also washed their hands with beer.

“That showed how abundant coffee was then; the price was very high. And that was many years ago,” he said.

Cagayan de Oro City Vice Mayor Cesar Ian Acenas said RMC’s coming to CDO, through its partnership with Xavier University and Brew Brothers Coffee Services Inc., will surely give a boost to the industry.

Acenas said that he learned from the franchise owner of a famous coffee chain that recently opened here that its one-month income alone exceeded P4 million.

“This means that RMC has a very good market here in the city since Kagay-anons are coffee drinkers,” he said.

He also praised RMC for believing in the Filipino coffee farmers.

“Remember, every time you drink a cup of Rocky Mountain Café coffee, you’re helping the Filipino farmers. We want to develop our local farmers,” Cote said.

Aside from being a business, RMC is basically a social enterprise that distributes only organic Arabica coffee grown by local farmers, especially indigenous peoples.

Cote said that when they set up RMC in 2006, they deliberately chose to partner with the indigenous peoples of the Philippines.

“We could have partnered with the private sector and earn a windfall but we won’t have any impact on society. We won’t be helping the community. So we made the decision that since we are looking for high altitude locations, we decided to partner with the tribes,” he said in a separate interview.

“RMC is more than just coffee. There is nothing more common than coffee. It’s been here for thousands of years and everybody drinks it. But what makes our coffee special is that when  you buy a bag of our coffee, you help the indigenous peoples,” he added.

In RMC’s coffee plantation in Benguet, the company is partnering with the Ibaloi and Kankaney tribes; in Kiamba, Sarangani, with the T’Boli tribe; in the Davao Region, with the Mandaya and Mansaka tribes; and in Bukidnon, with the Higaonons and Talaandigs.

Partnering with indigenous peoples or establishing coffee plantations in the tribes’ ancestral territories, however, is not easy.

Cote admitted that this process really takes time, which is why RMC is working closely with the National Commission on Indigenous People and the Department of Environment and Natural Resources to ensure that all the provisions in the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act in doing a project inside IPs’ ancestral territories are being followed by the company.

“We do public consultations before we do any project. There is no hanky-panky deal that we do with anybody. What we do is an open and free process. We consult the community and inform them in advance. Once their Council of Elders approves the project, then we negotiate and sign an agreement.

It’s a regulated process. It takes time but at least it’s transparent, and it’s fair,” he said.

Because of this, RMC coffee is famous throughout the world as “the coffee with a soul.”

“The indigenous peoples of the Philippines, they give soul and character to our coffee,” he added, which is why RMC will continue to work with the IPs to help empower them and bring back their pride.

RMC even highlights the profile of each tribe-partner in its web site.

In its Corporate Social Responsibility Policy Statement, RMC states: “We believe that taking concrete steps to improve the quality of life of the Filipino people is not just important, it is necessary for a company like ours whose greatest assets are our people, and whose existence depends on the community that hosts us.”

Thus, RMC sees to it that its partner-tribes have access to schools, health facilities, continuing education through trainings, and cooperative development, among others.

But more than these, RMC helps the tribes in the promotion of their unique and traditional indigenous culture.

“Rocky Mountain recognizes that the lives of the indigenous peoples are closely linked to their land. We manifest our profound respect for the indigenous cultural communities and their natural heritage by ensuring that our operations do not degrade the land and its precious resources. Rocky Mountain respects indigenous farming practices and at the same time integrates new farming technologies that make the lives of the men and women coffee farmers easier.

“The company upholds the heritage and traditions of the tribes in all its operations in the Philippines. We use indigenous architecture in the design of our plantation offices and mills. We adopt ethnic patterns and style in our farmers’ uniform. We use indigenous materials, such as abaca, for our coffee harvest baskets and sinamay and buri for the packaging of our finished products.

“We are honored to promote worldwide Philippine Arabica coffee and the unique culture of each Philippine indigenous community that produces it. The identify of Rocky Mountain Arabica Coffee Co. is enriched by the Philippine indigenous peoples who nurture our coffee,” said Cote.

By Business Mirror


Philippine Arabica Coffee Farming Opportunities

Aside from traditional crops such as rice, corn, and vegetables, there are great opportunities for Philippine farmers in growing specialty crops such as coffee, and other high value crops for local consumption and export. With food commodities at record high prices currently, the opportunity for Philippine farmers being successful in their farming efforts has never been greater. We are proud to help Philippine farmers with Nutriplant organic farming nutrients that provide higher harvest yields, and quality, with lower input costs for all types of agricultural crops.

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Monday, February 14, 2011

PhilRice Wins International Award

PhilRice
DA-Philrice wins AGFUND International Prize


A government program being implemented by the Department of Agriculture-Philippine Rice Research Institute (DA-PhilRice) has won an international award given by a Saudi Arabia-based funding organization.

The Open Academy for Philippine Agriculture (OPAPA) won the third category of the Arab Gulf Program for Development (AGFUND). The category concerns the “Role of Government Ministries and Public Institutions in the Adoption of New Innovations to Enhance the Application of ICT (Information and Communication Technology) for the Development of Remote and Rural Communities”.

DA-PhilRice and the winners of the three other 2010 AGFUND International Prize categories will receive their prizes at a ceremony to be subsequently convened.

For the feat, OPAPA will receive $100,000.

OPAPA was recommended to the AGFUND award by Dr. Suresh Ghandra Raj, representative in the Philippines of the United Nations International Development Organization (UNIDO).

Launched in 2003, OPAPA is being implemented by DA-PhilRice, currently headed by Executive Director Ronilo Beronio, to forge a strategic alliance among knowledge and resource generators, content developers, network providers, learning centers, extensionists, and farmers in information generation, dissemination, and sharing.

AGFUND is a regional developmental funding organization that actively works internationally in the field of development. To date, it has supported 1,268 projects in 133 developing countries.

Headed by Saudi Prince Talal Bin Abdul Aziz, AGFUND launched its International Prize for Pioneering Human Development in 1999 to “incite and encourage innovation and creativity in the areas of human development.”

The AGFUND 2010 winning projects were selected from among 28 nominated from 25 countries representing three continents.

AGFUND has recognized OPAPA for “its genuine efforts in developing and testing ICT applications that address challenges in agricultural development in the Philippines.”

OPAPA’s entry highlighted various ICT interventions, among them the PhilRice Text Center, Pinoy Farmers’ Internet (www.openacademy.ph), OPAPA e-learning program, Palay Chikahan (e-forum), virtual consultations, Pinoy Rice Knowledge Bank (www. Pinoyrkb.com), cyber communities, and ICT trainings using the Mobile Internet Bus.

“These modalities,” said DA-PhilRice, “connect lowly rice farmers to reliable sources of information, and also encourage collaborative learning among scientists, extension workers, farmers, and other concerned organizations. By keeping farmers informed of the latest technologies, they are more equipped to make better decisions in farm management.”

By Good News Pilipinas


Congratulations PhilRice!

PhilRice has done so much to elevate the global rice industry with its innovative rice technology programs. We commend and recognize PhilRice for its outstanding past efforts, and continued future efforts helping the Philippines and the world in the production of rice.

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Monday, February 7, 2011

Rice Prices Heading Higher


Lower Input Costs Higher Harvest Yield Quality


Rice Rebounds From Two-Year Drop as U.S. Crop Shrinks

U.S. farmers are planting the fewest acres with rice since 1989 just as global demand surpasses production for the first time in four years, driving prices as much as 12 percent higher by December.

Plantings in the U.S., the third-biggest shipper, may drop 25 percent this year because growers can earn more from corn and soybeans, according to the median in a Bloomberg survey of nine analysts and farmers. Rice, the staple food for half the world, declined 4 percent last year, extending a 2.9 percent drop in 2009. The other crops jumped 34 percent or more.

“Why would you want to take that risk to plant rice, knowing that your income is going to be way down?” said Terry Hatley, a farmer in Marked Tree, Arkansas, who may not plant any rice this year after growing the crop for more than three decades. “Farming is a business, and you’ve got to look at the economics of it. Now, the economics on rice are very dim.”

Bangladesh, South Asia’s biggest buyer, doubled a target for imports in 2011 to curb prices, the Directorate General of Food said last week. The Philippines, the world’s largest importer, will probably start buying next month, according to the National Food Authority. While global stockpiles are predicted to be 26 percent higher this year than in 2007, consumption will gain 3.4 percent and harvests 2.6 percent, the U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates.

The Thailand export price, the benchmark in Asia, may climb as high as $600 a metric ton by December from $534 on Jan. 26, a gain of 12 percent, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of eight traders, exporters and analysts.

‘Acreage War’

“The acreage war has begun,” said Dennis Delaughter, the owner of Progressive Farm Marketing Inc. in Edna, Texas, who expects futures traded on the Chicago Board of Trade to advance as much as 20 percent to a three-year high of $18 per 100 pounds by November. “Of all the futures markets in the agricultural sector, rice is the sleeper,” said Delaughter, who correctly predicted an 11 percent gain in prices last March.

Rice represents almost 50 percent of the food expenses of the poorest across the developing world, and 20 percent of total household spending, according to the International Rice Research Institute, based in Los Banos, the Philippines. In the U.S., 6 percent of incomes are spent on groceries, data from Euromonitor International show.

While the United Nations says global food prices climbed to a record in December, grain stockpiles have been replenished since 2007-2009, when the U.S. State Department estimates there were more than 60 food riots around the world.

Chicago Futures

Combined inventories of corn, wheat, rice and soybeans will end this year at 457.6 million tons, 21 percent more than in 2007, USDA data show.

Rice futures climbed the 50-cent exchange limit today in Chicago to $15.51 per 100 pounds, still 38 percent below the record $25.07 reached in April 2008. Traders anticipate prices no higher than $16.265 through January 2012, Chicago Board of Trade data show.

Hedge funds and money managers more than doubled their net-long positions, or wagers on rising prices, in the past two weeks, according to Commodity Futures Trading Commission data. Net-long positions were 3,403 contracts, the most in a year.

U.S. farmers have little incentive to stick with rice. Prices in Texas, the sixth-largest producing state, are only enough to break even, according to Larry Falconer, an economist with Texas A&M University’s AgriLife Extension in Corpus Christi. Switching to cotton, which has gained about 144 percent in 12 months in New York, would mean $200 an acre of profit, he said.

Soybean Futures

In Missouri, the fifth-largest U.S. producer, farmers can make about $50 more per acre on soybeans and $100 more on corn, said David Reinbott, an agriculture business specialist with the University of Missouri Extension in Benton. Corn and soybean futures climbed this month to the highest level since July 2008.

Wheat, corn and soybean prices jumped last year because crops were ruined by Russia’s worst drought in at least a half century, parched fields in Kazakhstan, Europe and South America and flooding in Canada. Rice prices fell because of ample supply. Output in the U.S. increased 7.6 percent to 7.44 million tons in the current marketing year, USDA data show.

U.S. Production

U.S. production in the year that begins Aug. 1 will drop because farmers will plant 2.73 million acres, down from 3.64 million acres in 2010, according to the Bloomberg survey. The USDA’s first acreage estimate is scheduled for March 31.

A rally may spur governments to curb exports to protect supply and contain inflation, said Milo Hamilton, a former buyer for Uncle Ben’s, the rice unit of McLean, Virginia-based food and candy maker Mars Inc. Russia banned grain exports last year after its drought and Ukraine set quotas on shipments.

“The main problem, both now and in 2008, is whether countries will curb exports,” said Hamilton, the president of Firstgrain.com, a rice advisory service in Austin, Texas. “Twenty or 30 countries produce and export wheat, but I can look at my fingers and count the rice exporters.”

When rice surged to a record in 2008, India and Egypt banned shipments, Vietnam barred speculators from its domestic market and China imposed export taxes.

Global Food Prices

Global food prices rose 25 percent last year, according to the UN’s index. Food inflation in China, home to about 1.3 billion people, reached 9.6 percent in December while in India it stayed above 15 percent for a fourth consecutive week in the period ended Jan. 15, government data show.

Bangladesh doubled its rice import target to cool prices that surged to a record in December as consumers and farmers hoarded supplies, said Badrul Hasan, director for procurement at the Directorate General of Food in Dhaka. The goal was raised to 1.2 million tons for the year to June 30 from 600,000 tons.

The Philippines may import as early as next month, although probably less than last year, Lito Banayo, the head of the National Food Authority, told reporters on Jan. 11.

“The trigger will be pulled when the Philippines’ orders start coming in,” said Mamadou Ciss, the chief executive officer of Singapore-based rice brokers Hermes Investments Pte, who correctly predicted in 2006 that prices would double. Thai 100 percent grade-B rice may jump 22 percent to $650, he said.

Thai Production

Production in Thailand, the world’s biggest exporter, will increase 0.4 percent to 20.35 million tons this year, according to USDA estimates. In Vietnam, the second-largest shipper, output will be little changed at 24.98 million, the data show.

Vietnam will export about 6 million tons this year, compared with 6.75 million tons in 2010, Deputy Agriculture Minister Diep Kinh Tan said in an interview Jan. 4.

La Nina, the weather pattern that brought heavier-than- usual rainfall to parts of Australia and Asia in the past year, may persist through the second quarter, according to the Australian Bureau of Meteorology.

“There are so many reasons for prices to move up,” Dwight Roberts, president of the Houston-based U.S. Rice Producers Association, said by phone. “We sure are poised for a strong and upward movement in the market.”

By Bloomberg


Global Food Crisis Prices at Critical Levels

The world is at a tipping point with its deceasing food supplies, increasing demand, and prices. Further disasters which can easily happen from time to time are only a matter of when they will happen. Take action now to help yourself and your country be food self-sufficient instead of relying on dwindling food supplies from abroad and increasing prices.

Nutriplant Nutriplus Organics Protocol Input Costs Per Hectare for All Types of Crops

Includes organic nutrients for seed sowing.

P2,500 1 Spray Application - For Rice Always Apply at Panicle Initiation

P3,800 2 Spray Application - Typical for rice, corn, fruits, vegetables, and flowers.

P5,200 3 Spray Application - Full Nutriplant Nutriplus application protocol with no other application required of any other nutrient fertilizer products.

Increase harvests, naturally organically, with lower input costs.

Good for the farmer, the environment, and the consumer.


Empowering Philippine Farmers

Nutriplant Organic Fertilizers
Nutriplant Organic Fertilizers


Click the links below to naturally and organically increase harvest productions with lower input costs.

Click here to review Nutriplus NPK 4-18-18 Organic Fertilizer

Click here to review Nutriplant AG Organic Fertilizer

Click here to review Nutriplant SD Organic Seed Germination Fertilizer

Click here to review APSA80 All Purpose Spray Adjuvant

Click here to review Nutriplus K+ Potassium

Click here to review Nutriplus Zn+ Zinc