Marj
DA-BAR reviews program for rubber as top industrial crop
by Marjorie M. Arriola - Friday, 20 July 2012, 12:21 PM
 
July 19, 2012 9:40 pm 

MANILA, July 19 – The Dept. of Agriculture-Bureau of Agricultural Research (DA-BAR) is reviewing its program for rubber which is a top industrial crop under the government’s program.

DA-BAR Director Nicomedes Eleazar DA-BAR is organizing the International Rubber Agroforestry Conference in partnership with the International Rubber Research and Development Board on Sept. 4-6, 2012 in H2O Hotel in Manila.

“We are continuing to assess on how to reach out to farmers and entrepreneurs in the rubber sector which can create many jobs considering the huge growing market for rubber in China and other economically advanced countries,” said Eleazar.

He said BAR is currently funding the implementation of a Research, Development, and Extension project in rubber in Mindoro with the DA-MIMAROPA (Mindoro, Marinduque, Romblon, Palawan) Research Division.

A 50-hectare rubber plantation expansion is eyed in a promising Oriental Mindoro community that now earns P65,000 per month from latex that can potentially be processed into higher-valued products.

While it is not a traditional rubber area, Oriental Mindoro immediately has 50 hectares that can expand further to 400 hectares for rubber as its livelihood promise is seen by farmer leaders.

Farmer leader-entrepreneur Mitch Miciano started planting rubber on an almost two-hectare land of his brother in 2005, and subsequently planted on three hectares in his own farm in Sitio Mahabang Parang, Brgy. Malaya, Pinamalayan town. Oriental Mindoro.

Now the almost two-hectare area has 700 trees which give consistent yield and a stable income of P65,000 per month.

“Except for one to two months of rest, all the months of the year, rubber will give a regular income specially for people here who don’t have a stable source of income,” he said.

“The one who taps earns 30 percent of the selling price right away,” said Miciano.

The investment climate for rubber has steadily become attractive.

Price doubled from cup lump’s only P30 per kilo when Miciano started planting rubber in 2005 to the present price reaching to P70 per kilo in Mindanao.

“Many people here are encouraged to plant rubber. One investor planted on 8,000 seedlings on seven hectares. In due time, we can become like Mindanao,” he said. But while the potential to create livelihood appears vast in this non-traditional rubber area, its success will largely depend on financing availability.

Production cost is at P100,000 in a place where capital is in dearth.

This includes cost for seeds, fertilization, labor for clearing lands, and planting.

But this cost excludes the cash needs of farm families for their daily sustenance while waiting for the tree to produce latex. It takes five years for a budded seedling—a seedling that receives its top stem from a mature, short-gestating, good quality rubber tree—to become ready for latex tapping.

The budded seedling costs P60 per piece, and this price will still increase as it has to be transported from Zamboanga.

The investor that brought in 8,000 seedlings to the town spent P170,000 just for transportation, Miciano said.
Government’s assistance should also be in the provision of budded seedlings which has the advantage of yielding latex in just five years, instead of the long 10 years for non-budded seedlings.

Rudy Galang, BAR rubber specialist, said Land Bank has a window specially for rubber production.

Rubber is also one of the industries now being given assistance by the DA through the Agricultural Competitiveness Enhancement Fund, Galang said .

An important input to rubber planting that must also be financed in the long term is farmers’ acquisition of a processing facility that can produce higher-priced semi-finished products.

“Researchers of the University of Southern Mindanao in Kabacan, Cotabato led by Dr. Romulo Sena has developed a village-type processing facility costing P50,000 to P70,000 per unit,” Galang said.

“In Mindanao, traders compete on offering a good price to farmers. Once our volume of production increases, traders will just come readily,” said Miciano.

From the plantation area alone, potential job to be created is one for every hectare.

That excludes potential jobs for tappers or the one that extracts rubber latex from the trees, transporters, processing skilled labor, and marketers.

“At the P65 price per kilo now, that means P65,000 peso per month gross income. You cannot earn that from coconut or any other trees,” Galang said.

Rubber price is foreseen to continue to rise in the world market. Miciano said: “There’s a shortage of supply in the world market because China is getting rich, and car sales is increasing tremendously, and the rubber tires that go with these cars.

"Even if you plant rubber in all farmlands of the Philippines, it will not be enough to supply the present demand.”
“Malaysia has become rich because of rubber because they planted it on all their mountains even in slopes, said Miciano, a former bank finance officer who turned to planting rubber.

“It’s good that DA has a thrust to plant rubber. You just shouldn’t be impatient. I myself haven’t been able to notice the five years waiting time before we began harvesting.”

Aside from being an industrial crop, rubber is considered an environment protection crop.

“Its roots grow laterally or sideways. It’s not deep rooted, and its benefit is the top soil is maintained. It is an erosion control tool,” said Miciano.

Rubber’s foliage is also expansive, so it absorbs carbon dioxide significantly, contributing to a reversal in the effects of global warming..

With this prospect, the Agricutural Training Institute has a plan to put up a large-scale technology demonstration farm in Bansud, Oriental Mindoro, said Galang.

There is currently an estimated 150,000 hectares of rubber land in the country.

Galang added: “Rubber is now very popular in Oriental Mindoro. They’re attracted because of what they saw in Pinamalayan.

"There are many agrarian reform lands that are planned to be planted with rubber because right now people there just plant kamote (sweet potato), vegetables. Cooperatives will be given planting materials for a total of 40 hectares in Bansud.”

Expansion of rubber plantations should enable Philippines to expand its market as the world demand for natural rubber was previously estimated to reach to 12.4 million metric tons (MT) by 2020. (PNA)hbc/MAGI

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