Status and potentials of the Philippine cassava industry

Cassava is planted each year in about 120,000 hectares of agricultural land in the Philippines, producing about 1.8 million tonnes of cassava roots. Principal products of the processing industry are food, dried chips and starch. As a traded commodity, however, cassava contributes only about 2% to gross value-adding in agriculture. The following factors favor the expansion of the industry: a) trends in associated commodities, b) dwindling prime agricultural land, c) expanding demand for cassava products, and d) availability of improved technologies. As a food crop, demand for cassava is increasing and this trend is expected to continue with the increase in population and improvements in techniques for transforming cassava roots into more stable, convenient and attractive products. Cassava has gained gradual acceptance as a high-energy component in commercial feed formulations. This is fueled by chronic shortages and the resulting high price of domestically produced maize. In specific locations, farmers now recognize that intercropping cassava with maize and given optimum care, this cropping system is economically comparable to two maize monocrops, and provides a more reliable income. The outlook for the cassava starch industry in the Philippines is rather bleak. Trade liberalization and the absence of real government assistance in improving productivity and efficiency are threatening the survival of this sector. The agricultural modernization program, which is supposed to cushion the impact of trade liberalization, virtually has had no funding during the first two years from its passage, and until now has not produced anything of practical significance. With the negative outlook for the Philippine sugar industry, cassava emerged as the most viable alternative source of raw material for production of alcohol for liquor. San Miguel Corporation has been investing heavily on plant construction and supply base development since 1995. The greatest challenge in the future will be to put in place a system that results in an adequate and stable year-round supply of cassava for the distillery. Strengthening the cassava industry in the Philippines requires strengthening the linkage between production and markets accompanied by improved access to credit, supportive government policies and appropriate technical support.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bacusmo, José L.
Format: Book Chapter biblioteca
Language:English
Published: International Center for Tropical Agriculture 2001
Subjects:manihot esculenta, industry, production data, farm area, crop yield, farm income, starch industry, tapioca, industria, datos de producción, superficie de la explotación, rendimiento de cultivos, renta de la explotación, industria almidonera,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/82426
http://ciat-library.ciat.cgiar.org/Articulos_Ciat/Digital/SB123.E9C.2_An_exchange_of_experiences_from_South_and_South_East_Asia.pdf#page=542
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-824262023-03-14T20:09:38Z Status and potentials of the Philippine cassava industry Bacusmo, José L. manihot esculenta industry production data farm area crop yield farm income starch industry tapioca industria datos de producción superficie de la explotación rendimiento de cultivos renta de la explotación industria almidonera Cassava is planted each year in about 120,000 hectares of agricultural land in the Philippines, producing about 1.8 million tonnes of cassava roots. Principal products of the processing industry are food, dried chips and starch. As a traded commodity, however, cassava contributes only about 2% to gross value-adding in agriculture. The following factors favor the expansion of the industry: a) trends in associated commodities, b) dwindling prime agricultural land, c) expanding demand for cassava products, and d) availability of improved technologies. As a food crop, demand for cassava is increasing and this trend is expected to continue with the increase in population and improvements in techniques for transforming cassava roots into more stable, convenient and attractive products. Cassava has gained gradual acceptance as a high-energy component in commercial feed formulations. This is fueled by chronic shortages and the resulting high price of domestically produced maize. In specific locations, farmers now recognize that intercropping cassava with maize and given optimum care, this cropping system is economically comparable to two maize monocrops, and provides a more reliable income. The outlook for the cassava starch industry in the Philippines is rather bleak. Trade liberalization and the absence of real government assistance in improving productivity and efficiency are threatening the survival of this sector. The agricultural modernization program, which is supposed to cushion the impact of trade liberalization, virtually has had no funding during the first two years from its passage, and until now has not produced anything of practical significance. With the negative outlook for the Philippine sugar industry, cassava emerged as the most viable alternative source of raw material for production of alcohol for liquor. San Miguel Corporation has been investing heavily on plant construction and supply base development since 1995. The greatest challenge in the future will be to put in place a system that results in an adequate and stable year-round supply of cassava for the distillery. Strengthening the cassava industry in the Philippines requires strengthening the linkage between production and markets accompanied by improved access to credit, supportive government policies and appropriate technical support. 2001 2017-06-20T09:02:11Z 2017-06-20T09:02:11Z Book Chapter Bacusmo, Jose L.. 2001. Status and potentials of the Philippine cassava industry . In: Howeler, Reinhardt H.; Tan, Swee Lian (eds.). Cassava's potential in Asia in the 21st Century: Present situation and future research and development needs: Proceedings of the sixth Regional workshop, held in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, Feb. 21-25, 2000 . Centro Internacional de Agricultura Tropical (CIAT), Cassava Office for Asia, Cali, CO. p. 84-101. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/82426 http://ciat-library.ciat.cgiar.org/Articulos_Ciat/Digital/SB123.E9C.2_An_exchange_of_experiences_from_South_and_South_East_Asia.pdf#page=542 en Open Access p. 84-101 application/pdf International Center for Tropical Agriculture Cassava Office for Asia
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic manihot esculenta
industry
production data
farm area
crop yield
farm income
starch industry
tapioca
industria
datos de producción
superficie de la explotación
rendimiento de cultivos
renta de la explotación
industria almidonera
manihot esculenta
industry
production data
farm area
crop yield
farm income
starch industry
tapioca
industria
datos de producción
superficie de la explotación
rendimiento de cultivos
renta de la explotación
industria almidonera
spellingShingle manihot esculenta
industry
production data
farm area
crop yield
farm income
starch industry
tapioca
industria
datos de producción
superficie de la explotación
rendimiento de cultivos
renta de la explotación
industria almidonera
manihot esculenta
industry
production data
farm area
crop yield
farm income
starch industry
tapioca
industria
datos de producción
superficie de la explotación
rendimiento de cultivos
renta de la explotación
industria almidonera
Bacusmo, José L.
Status and potentials of the Philippine cassava industry
description Cassava is planted each year in about 120,000 hectares of agricultural land in the Philippines, producing about 1.8 million tonnes of cassava roots. Principal products of the processing industry are food, dried chips and starch. As a traded commodity, however, cassava contributes only about 2% to gross value-adding in agriculture. The following factors favor the expansion of the industry: a) trends in associated commodities, b) dwindling prime agricultural land, c) expanding demand for cassava products, and d) availability of improved technologies. As a food crop, demand for cassava is increasing and this trend is expected to continue with the increase in population and improvements in techniques for transforming cassava roots into more stable, convenient and attractive products. Cassava has gained gradual acceptance as a high-energy component in commercial feed formulations. This is fueled by chronic shortages and the resulting high price of domestically produced maize. In specific locations, farmers now recognize that intercropping cassava with maize and given optimum care, this cropping system is economically comparable to two maize monocrops, and provides a more reliable income. The outlook for the cassava starch industry in the Philippines is rather bleak. Trade liberalization and the absence of real government assistance in improving productivity and efficiency are threatening the survival of this sector. The agricultural modernization program, which is supposed to cushion the impact of trade liberalization, virtually has had no funding during the first two years from its passage, and until now has not produced anything of practical significance. With the negative outlook for the Philippine sugar industry, cassava emerged as the most viable alternative source of raw material for production of alcohol for liquor. San Miguel Corporation has been investing heavily on plant construction and supply base development since 1995. The greatest challenge in the future will be to put in place a system that results in an adequate and stable year-round supply of cassava for the distillery. Strengthening the cassava industry in the Philippines requires strengthening the linkage between production and markets accompanied by improved access to credit, supportive government policies and appropriate technical support.
format Book Chapter
topic_facet manihot esculenta
industry
production data
farm area
crop yield
farm income
starch industry
tapioca
industria
datos de producción
superficie de la explotación
rendimiento de cultivos
renta de la explotación
industria almidonera
author Bacusmo, José L.
author_facet Bacusmo, José L.
author_sort Bacusmo, José L.
title Status and potentials of the Philippine cassava industry
title_short Status and potentials of the Philippine cassava industry
title_full Status and potentials of the Philippine cassava industry
title_fullStr Status and potentials of the Philippine cassava industry
title_full_unstemmed Status and potentials of the Philippine cassava industry
title_sort status and potentials of the philippine cassava industry
publisher International Center for Tropical Agriculture
publishDate 2001
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/82426
http://ciat-library.ciat.cgiar.org/Articulos_Ciat/Digital/SB123.E9C.2_An_exchange_of_experiences_from_South_and_South_East_Asia.pdf#page=542
work_keys_str_mv AT bacusmojosel statusandpotentialsofthephilippinecassavaindustry
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