DA to introduce typhoon-resistant infrastructure for chili peppers

The Department of Agriculture is introducing typhoon-resistant farm infrastructure to stabilize chili pepper prices, which often surge due to crop damage from heavy rains and storms. Agriculture Secretary Francisco Tiu Laurel Jr. said this is part of a broader strategy to make chili production more predictable amid the Philippines' volatile weather.

Amid frequent price surges for chili peppers during the rainy season, reaching as high as P800 per kilo for siling labuyo in September due to crop damage, the Department of Agriculture (DA) plans to build greenhouses using local materials and structures designed to withstand strong storms. The goal is to protect crops from floods and prolonged rainfall.

"We need to know how much we consume, how much we produce and where the gaps are," Tiu Laurel said. These data will guide the number of hectares to plant and how quickly production can scale. The DA is also establishing baseline figures on national and Metro Manila chili consumption, current output, and average yield per hectare.

Chili cultivation is not limited to traditional areas like Bicol and can be done in most parts of the country under the DA's High Value Crops program. For 2026, chili is a priority crop alongside munggo or mung beans, with the focus on lowering prices for the former and reducing imports for the latter.

The DA will expand access to clean planting materials such as siling labuyo, siling pansigang, and grafted bell peppers through its Gulayan sa Bayan program, which aims to boost agri-entrepreneurship in 1,370 municipalities. Bell pepper prices have hovered around P250 per kilo, while munggo prices continue to fluctuate, highlighting the food market's sensitivity to supply shocks and import reliance.

Tiu Laurel noted that stabilizing chili output would benefit restaurants, food processors, and retailers, especially during peak demand periods like holidays. For transparency, the DA has ordered weekly public updates on prices and supply starting this month, using articles and short-form videos.

مقالات ذات صلة

The Department of Agriculture is intensifying market interventions as palay prices weaken in several major rice-producing provinces, with the main harvest season nearing completion. About 77 percent of the national harvest is already in. The National Food Authority is raising its buying price to counter the decline.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

The Department of Agriculture has formed a food security task force to monitor and address disruptions in agricultural supply, prices, and trade due to energy emergencies and geopolitical tensions. DA Secretary Francisco Tiu Laurel Jr. said it replaces the department's previous ad hoc monitoring system.

Suleiman Maundu Ramadhan, an engineer from Tala in Machakos County, has installed irrigation systems to transform arid land into a mixed farming operation. He faced market challenges during the Covid-19 pandemic but now produces tons of onions and tomatoes each season. His farm employs 24 permanent workers.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Amid oil price hikes and fewer customers, fish and flower vendors at Cebu City's Carbon Market are seeing sharp drops in earnings. Product prices like shrimp have risen by up to P100 since March 17, 2026. Transportation costs for fish carts have also doubled.

 

 

 

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