Digicast Negros

UNIFED lauds DA, SRA for strengthening laws vs, molasses importation, RSSI

SRA Administrator Pablo Luis Azcona and UNIFED President Manuel Lamata (right) at a recent meeting at the Capitol on the fight against RSSI.*

The United Sugar Producers’ Federation of the Philippines (UNIFED) thanked the Department of Agriculture and the Sugar Board for finally closing a loophole on the use of imported molasses—which was detrimental to the sugar industry—through Sugar Order No. 4.

“This was an oversight that could have killed the industry had it not been amended,” UNIFED President Manuel Lamata said in a press release Sunday, June 27.

 He added that they find it “strange” that “despite two amendments to Sugar Order No. 14, Series of 2008-2009, no one bothered to correct Section 6 that allowed the importation of products derived from sugarcane and sugar as feedstock for bioethanol production.”

“It was clearly unlawful, and more so during that time when the ethanol industry was in its infancy, with just one ethanol plant running, so demand for molasses was low and could have been easily covered by local raw material producers,” Lamata said, asking, “What was in it for the people who wrote it, who kept it, and were totally mum about it?”

While other groups are just bent on criticizing what the current administration has done and is doing, “it was only the Marcos administration that had the nerve to issue policies on molasses import regulations,” Lamata added.

UNIFED reiterated its support for the existing RSSI Task Force formed last year, which is headed by Gov. Eugenio Jose Lacson and composed of various government agencies, sugar federations, and the province.

“We hope this will be strengthened at the city and municipality level,” Lamata said.

“We saw a rise in RSSI infestation last year and also saw a decline as the Task Force did its job. With the resurgence, the Governor and the SRA saw the need to involve the rest of the industry—at least those who are willing to work with them—to ensure that damage caused by RSSI infestation will be arrested,” Lamata said.

“We do not need to create a new task force just so one group who has not done anything but complain can be accommodated. What have they done to help when it was clear that sugar federations were also part of the task force created last year?” he added.

“Why are they complaining about the efforts of the SRA, which put in the time and budget to actually answer the industry’s call to help the farmers? Don’t we want any help? I suggest we put our money where our mouths are,” Lamata said.

Many believe that this is the time to unite, and UNIFED will continue to work alongside those who truly have the best interests of the sugar industry at heart, he said.

“This is why we are actually organizing a series of gatherings, and we are scheduled to sit down with Negros Oriental leaders as well because we know how crucial it is that we get our act together and not just protect our provincial borders, but the entire island and even beyond,” Lamata added.

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