777sm PH bracing for steeper drop in rice harvest
Updated:2024-10-25 03:47    Views:77

The Department of Agriculture (DA) anticipates domestic palay (unmilled rice) production to decline this year due to the combined effects of El Niño and La Niña weather phenomena and the typhoons that affected the country.

The DA revised its palay output projection for 2024 to 19.41 million metric tons (MT), a 3.1 percent decrease from the previous estimate of 20.04 million MT. The new volume is equivalent to 12.69 million MT of milled rice.

Citing a forecast from the Philippine Statistics Authority, palay production is pegged at 3.35 million MT in the third quarter of this year, a decline of 11.9 percent, primarily because of significant crop damage from recent typhoons.

Article continues after this advertisement

READ: PH remains world’s largest rice importer

FEATURED STORIES BUSINESS BCDA strikes deal to sell Naia Terminal 3 to government for P65B BUSINESS BIZ BUZZ: Ares invests in Belo Medical Group BUSINESS Best Employers in PH unveiled

Agriculture Undersecretary Christopher Morales said the loss in local output is projected at 358,000 MT, based on historical damages and actual risks this quarter.

“The decrease in production would have been higher were it not for higher production yield due to better seeds, farm equipment and other support provided through the Rice fund under the Rice Tariffication Law and National Rice Program,” the DA said in a statement on Wednesday.

Article continues after this advertisement

The Philippines recorded the highest palay output of 20.06 million MT last year, 1.53 percent higher than the year prior. It surpassed the previous record of 19.96 million logged in 2019.

Article continues after this advertisement

So far, the statistics agency reported that the country had produced 8.53 million MT of palay in the first semester of 2024, down by 5.5 percent from the same period last year.

Article continues after this advertisement

The PSA will publish the third quarter report on the Philippine agriculture sector’s performance in November.

Enough for local consumption

Despite the anticipated decline, the DA still sees a robust rice supply of 3.83 million MT this year, enough to cover the country’s consumption for 100 days.

Article continues after this advertisement

Morales said the rosy outlook considered the updated rice stockpile data, actual import arrivals and historical trends.

“The recent cut in tariff rates further incentivized imports, allowing for greater access to global rice markets and mitigating potential shortages,” Morales said.

READ: Marcos: Expect rice prices to fall further

Early this month, the US Department of Agriculture estimated that the country would import 4.7 million MT of rice this year due to the strong buying of Vietnam rice.

The foreign agency said rice import would surge to 4.9 million MT in 2025 due to a smaller crop delivered by local farms.

Meanwhile, the US Department of Agriculture said the country’s milled rice production would end at 12.7 million MT in 2024 and 12.3 million next year due to crop damage from successive typhoons and a reduction in area harvested due to land conversion.

This year, the Philippines has imported 3.59 million MT rice as of Oct. 17, based on Bureau of Plant Industry data.

Most of the imported rice came from Vietnam, which exported 2.84 million MT. Other countries such as Thailand, Pakistan, Myanmar and India supplied rice to the archipelago.

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again. Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

SIGN ME UP

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

All rice stocks purchased from abroad are levied an import duty of 15 percent until 2028777sm, based on Executive Order No. 62 signed by President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. in June this year.

READ NEXT Peza records nearly P8B worth of investments in October MPIC unloads stake in jet fuel terminal EDITORS' PICK Kristine is now over Cordillera Region crossing Northern Luzon – Pagasa 61 areas under storm signals as Kristine moves across Luzon Baggage delays seen at Naia 3 until July Kristine kills 7 persons, affects over 2 million people, says NDRRMC PBA Finals: Kobe vs Jordan? Brownlee, RHJ face off for title again Mayon Volcano debris partially buries Albay villages as storm hits Bicol MOST READ Tropical Storm Kristine slightly intensifies; Signal No. 2 in 5 areas Taxing Pogos did not make them legal, says Sotto Walang Pasok: Class suspensions on Wednesday, Oct. 23 LIVE UPDATES: Tropical Storm Kristine View comments