Rep. Emilio Bernardino Yulo (Neg. Occ., 5th District) said he remains hopeful that sugar farming will be profitable for farmers, especially with the increase in production cost necessitated by the prolonged dry spell.
Yulo, issued the statement Tuesday, Sept. 10, in the light of the opening of the milling season in a couple of weeks which he hopes would “bring in better prices for our sugar farmers.”
“We have a lot of farms that had to double their fertilizer and other inputs to reverse the effects of the El Niño resulting to a much higher production cost than normal,” Yulo said.
He said that in the previous crop year, “our farmers suffered from low millgate prices for majority of the milling weeks and for this crop year, our farmers had to face high production costs.”
His statement was echoed by Hinigaran Mayor Nadie Arceo who said that their production cost increased by at least 20 percent and “farmers had to replant with the prices of canepoint doubled,” because of the dry spell.
Arceo who is also president of Unifarms Inc., a sugar association with more than 3,000 members, of which 90 percent belong to the small or marginalized farmers, said “We are looking forward to have a good start this milling season to at least recoup our cost and earn a little profit”.
Yulo said SRA has a big role to play by “managing well the supply and demand side to ensure reasonable returns and profit for our farmers”.
The industry is already losing land planted to sugar to real estate and other development programs and if we want to see an increase in sugar lands and make ourselves sustainable, we need to make sugar farming profitable, especially for small farmers who comprise a big bulk of our producers, Yulo added.*