LA TRINIDAD, Benguet — Benguet farmers who now produce a daily
average of more than 2,000 tons of temperate vegetables have until 2016 to
widen their market outlets to withstand competition from their counterparts in
Asia and other parts of the world.
Benguet Gov. Nestor Fongwan said the
responsibility will be undertaken by the Benguet Farmers Cooperative which,
through government infrastructures and assistance, made vegetable production in
the area a multimillion-peso industry.
“The free trade agreement which will take
effect in 2016, the Philippines being a signatory with other nations in the
world, will subject our farmers to a stiff competition with their counterparts
especially with countries like China which have high standards of farming
technology,” he said.
He said one way of bolstering the local
farmers’ competitiveness would be to widen their market opportunities.
To date, a large bulk of the temperate
vegetables produced along the 100-kilometer stretch of Halsema Highway is
transported to Metro Manila. A certain volume is exported to Japan, and the
rest is sold in local markets especially along the coastal areas of
northwestern Luzon.
“Our prospective additional buyers are the
international food chains that produce daily French fries for their customers.
We were informed that up to now, these food chains import their potatoes from
other countries which have the so-called processing type of potatoes,” he said.
“We can also produce the same kind of
potatoes if given the particular variety as well as the technology of how to
produce the same in commercial scale,” he assured.
In the past, through both the local
government of Benguet and the Benguet State University (BSU), many local
farmers were taught of the new farming technologies from Japan and those
practiced in the University of the Philippines Los Baños.
Their training was mostly manifested in the
improved qualities in the produced strawberries, vegetables and other cash
crops through the use of open terraces during summer and greenhouses during
rainy season.
It was also in that period when Fongwan led
the better packaging of products here which saw the improved marketing status
of agricultural products here, including those of the relatively new cutflower
industry.
Fongwan said the farmers are optimistic that
just as how the government effectively stopped vegetable smuggling in the
country, “the government can also help them become globally competitive.” --
PNA
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