29 April 2022

Mr Elon Musk, What The World Needs Now Is “The Musk Regenerative Ability Prizes!” Plural. Sorry, “The Zayed Sustainability Prize” Is Still Abetting Climate Change!

Facebook surprised me today, Thursday, 28 April 2022 with “The Zayed Sustainability Prize” post. The Zayed Prize covers 5 categories: Energy, Food, Global High Schools, Health, and Water.

“Great!” I told myself, “Thank you very much, Mr Zayed! At this moment of world history, The Zayed Prize should be stimulating worldwide quite a number of brains to come up with original concepts of ways toward resource sustainability. We must sustain our world, right?”

In a little while, I remembered that I myself had moved on from the principle of “sustain-ability” to that of “regenerative ability” as early as 2 years ago (see my essay, “Regenerative Farming – Enriching The Soil Enriching The Farmers,” 29 October 2020, Towards A New Eden, Blogspot.com). I said at that time our farmers – not to mention our gardeners – must regenerate the richness of the soils that they have consistently removed and/or prevented from coming back by modern chemical farming & gardening methods:

As it is, much Sustainable Agriculture is Chemical Agriculture enriching the pockets of food producers while impoverishing the health of food consumers! (Your honest intentions are noted, Mr Zayed.)

I have noted that American would-be trillionaire Elon Musk has been going after Twitter, to free it from censorship of press freedom.
(Elon Musk image from news.com.au)

I have a Twitter account, but I have ignored it for years because you cannot limit the number of words I will use in a single message. Contrast that to the number of words in each essay I write today with Blogspot.com; each is exactly 517 words (Frank A Hilario), including title, excluding author. I demand my press freedom!

Aside from Extremely Limited Press Freedom, the world today is suffering much from the Climate Crisis. Mr Musk, Sir, you can do hugely about it by encouraging brains & brawns to come up with solutions to defeat climate change and regenerate the Earth this way and that, forward and backward. You can do it! I encourage you to create a Musk Foundation dedicated to bestowing every year honor & honorarium to people creative towards the regeneration of the natural environment –“The Musk Regenerative Prizes” – plural, worth a total of US$ 202 Million. (Why that amount? Because “202” is the “number of rebirth, regeneration and dominance… also smoothness and simplicity of life” – Angel Number, angelnumber.org.)

Goaded by the Musk Regenerative Prizes, we humans are going to be creative and save our civilizations, our world that has already commonly lostso much, among others, the
mildness of our daily weather,
richness of our soils,
biodiversity of our fields and forests,
fishes in our oceans & swamps,
healthy natural foods we should grow, and
healthy natural bodies we should enjoy!
(“Happy boy with plantlet on rich potted soil” image from yahoo.com)

Mr Musk, once you establish The Musk Regenerative Prizes, you will spend Millions of Dollars while you will save Billions of Lives of People! Please save our billion people, not your million dollars!@517

28 April 2022

Hybrid Rice Companies, Why Don’t They Sell Their Seeds By Packaging With Farmer Choices Between Chemical And Organic Fertilizers? For Much Better Business – And Much Better Climates!

Hybrid Rice (HR) is not my hot cup of coffee, but it struck me this morning, Wednesday, 27 April 2022, that HR companies could help themselves sell more of their packages of wonder seeds – and at the same time be very agriculture-friendly – 2 birds with 1 stone.

As a volunteer promoter of PH Agriculture, I am thinking of proclaiming the wonders of HR along with the wonders of regenerative organic agriculture – your hybrid rice helping the farmers bring about 2 victories: (1) rise over their own poverty and (2) simultaneously rise above climate change!

It will be historic – private interest in agriculture bringing about public interest in climate change.

I am speaking as the forward-looking originator and promoter of Communication for Village Development in the 21st Century (CoViD21). I am a UP Los Baños graduate, BSA major in Ag Edu – an agriculturist and a teacher. My grade is nothing to sneeze at despite several 5’s: 2.36 Weighted Average. And I have been blogging in Agriculture in the last 22 years with something like 9 million words written in proper essay form.

I hereby declare that hybrid rice can be more successfully propagated among the 10 million Filipino rice farmers if it is associated with:

(1)    Defeating poverty of rice farmers, and

(2)    Defeating climate change!

How? Practicing organic farming.

Yes, Sirs, if you did not know, organic farming is regenerative farming, bringing back the:

(1) natural richness of the soil;
(2) crop of its natural goodness – from natural elements in the organic matter come the healthy nutrients in the food we eat;
(3) health of our bodies as we consume the healthy foods;
(4) Earth’s health as it contributes zero to greenhouse gases that produce climate change.

What more could we ask?!

I have a running respect for hybrid rice companies. After all, they came 20 March 2019, when PH’s 8thNational Rice Technology Forum (NRTF) happened in my hometown Asingan, Pangasinan – the above is my 06:11 AM photograph of the “Welcome to Asingan, Pangasinan” sign at the border of Asingan and Urdaneta City. The companies that participated in the NRTF included Advanta, Bayer, BioRice, Corteva, and Longpin.

Luisa Maria Jacinta C Jocson is positive about HR; she says, “Hybrid Rice Touted As Higher Yielding Despite Expense” (07 Feb 2022, BusinessWorld, businessworld.com). Yet, she says, as of 15 Jan, hundreds of thousands of hectares of rice lands remained unplanted to hybrid rice, 614,619 ha against a total of 152,000,000 ha, or only 40%.

I declare: Hybrid rice companies could sell much, much more if they packaged agricultural scientific choices along with agribusiness tips – in popular language – with their wonder seeds.

I mean, they need a copywriter who is also conversant with the technology. As a UP Los Baños graduate who has been blogging in the last 22 years about agriculture:

I am volunteering to mastermind 1 hybrid rice-organic agriculture brochure for free! First come, first served. PM me for email.@517

27 April 2022

Can You Grow Sugarcane Solely By Organic Fertilizer? CaneCo In The Antilles Archipelago Shows The World How!

“Trash Farming” I discovered for myself in 1966 browsing the open shelves of the library of UP College of Agriculture (now UP Los Baños) and accidentally finding the 2 books of Edward H Faulkner, American farmer: Plowman’s Folly (1943) and Soil Development (1952). To me, agriculture has never been the same since. 

I am reading a very happy report by ANN published by CaneCo in its website: “Trash Farming – Simple But Effective!” (Author Not Named, 21 Dec 2020, CaneCo, caneco.gd). CaneCo is located in Grenada in the Antilles Archipelago. ANN says:

The concept of trash farming – or simply put mulching – has been around for a long time in the sugar cane industry and scientifically studied since around the 1950s. It’s only in recent decades though that sugarcane producers have really started paying attention to preserving soil fertility this way.

In the Philippines, UPLB professor Teodoro C Mendoza says rice straw is still only used as feed for cattle, not recycled in the field; for sugarcane, 36% of trash is returned to the soil (“Enhancing Crop Residues Recycling in the Philippine Landscape,” uploaded 03 May 2015, downloadable from ResearchGate, researchgate.net).

About trash farming in rice, I have a personal story – that happened after I discovered Faulkner’s books. That time, my father Dionisio was preparing our 1 ha of land for rice in Domanpot in our hometown Asingan, Pangasinan, and he had engaged the services of a big Howard tractor with rotavator. This was my chance to be innovative. Inspired by what I learned from Faulkner, I ordered the Howard operator to set to zero the cutting of the blades, just run them over the field, thank you very much!

Some 15 or 20 years later, my brother-in-law Enso Casasos, who was present as our farmhand and heard & saw everything during that Domanpot rotavator episode, told me in Ilocano (I’m translating freely now): “Manong, do you remember what you told the Howard operator? He was smiling in one corner of his mouth!” (“umis-isem isuna ti bangbangir!”)

Why because the tractor was only rolling along on the field, barely consuming oil, not digging the soil. What the Howard operator did not know was that the rotavator blades were actually cutting the soil andthe weeds into nice pieces and mixing them at the same time in one rotary motion – not part of learning how to drive a tractor with a rotavator, is it? This actually and effectively and automaticallylaid a layer of trash all over the field – organic matter at your prayer request!

I now call the process “Rotavator Organic WEALth – Weeds-Enriched Automatic Layer of Trash to Trigger Terrestrial Health.” (See my 16 Feb 2022 essay, “For A Happier & Healthier Habitat Philippines! Triple A For Agriculture,” Towards A New Eden, Blogspot.com).

Rotavator Organic WEALth is what I can offer rice farmers and sugarcane growers, among other farmers in the Philippines and the rest of the world – and it is what I can proudly demonstrate to CaneCo in the Antilles Archipelago!@517

26 April 2022

What Is Wrong With Our Education? It’s Not What We Teach But How We Teach That Is The Problem!

Australia-born Filipino businessman Peter Wallace reminds us today that in 2019 the Philippines ranked the lowest in Grade 4 Math and Science among 58 countries studied (25 April 2022, “Our Future At Risk,” Inquirer, Inquirer.net). That our future is at risk, I agree. What do we do now, if late?

His advice is based on the results of the American 2019 Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) (Bonz Magsambol, 09 Dec 2020, “PH Lowest Among 58 Countries In Math, Science – Global Assessment,” Rappler, Rappler.com).

Mr Wallace does not suggest a specific educational initiative to improve Filipino Math and Science performances, but I will – after all, I am the teacher, a UP Los Baños BSA Ag Edu graduate, with a 1964 Civil Service Professional license.

Educational example: Should Agriculture be mostly Math and Science? Ah, I think that is where the problem lies! We teach Math and Science as logical progressions solely:

From Grade School to Grad School, teachers emphasize memorizing, not thinking!

Thus, we teach: “1 + 1” equals “2” – that is correct, but we stop there.
(upper image from PNG, png.egg.com)

“Can we teach Math and Science also outside of logic?” The thinking answer is, “Yes!”
(lower image from NewPath Learning, newpathlearning.com)

We can teach other ways how we get 2, or why, such as “7 – 5” and ”12 ÷ 6” and ”2 x 1.”

Even with basic math operations, we can teach thinking!

And therefore, since the other 57 TIMSS countries do not teach what I have just taught you, they are as poor in teaching from Grade School to Grad School as we Filipinos are!

To show how to teach thinking now then, following my chosen college field, I will now teach you Agriculture: Regenerative Agriculture (RAg) no less.

High school math lesson in RAg:

Instead of P5,000 for chemical fertilizer, you spend P1,000 to create your own organic fertilizer – did you lose or gain?

At any level, that’s intelligent teaching!

The trouble with the Philippine educational system is that we do not teach our teachers to teach thinking but to teach memorizing Math and Science!

Another RAg lesson in thinking, college level:

What happens when you add nothing but organic fertilizer for 5 years to the farm that has been fertilized with NPK for the last 50 years?

Excellent question!

Here are other intelligent RAg questions:

“What happens to your body when you consume healthy food?”
“What happens to the costs & returns of the farmer when s/he practices organic farming instead of chemical farming?”
“What happens to the contribution of greenhouse gases when the farm no longer uses chemical fertilizers?”

The problem in PH Agriculture is that not one of the state colleges & universities (SCUs) of the Philippines teaches organic farming, which is a form of RAg. That is to say, the SCUs are hardly teaching thinking to Agriculture students.

The hurtful truth is that from Grade School to Grad School, our teachers mostlyteach memorizing, and hardly teach thinking!@517

25 April 2022

Climate Change, The World At Large And I As Prophet Of Boom – Regenerative Agriculture

None of the PH Presidentiables is talking about what more havoc Climate Change can bring to Agriculture, the #1 industry in the Philippines. That is not surprising, as even the #1 university of agriculture in the country, UP Los Baños, is hardly talking about this universal danger!

In next May or June, with a new President of my country, current Secretary of Agriculture William Dar may be replaced (I hope not) – but this current overall farming-related problem will not be replaced: Chemical Agriculture (CA) wreaking havoc on the environment by generating greenhouse gases (GHGs).

How large is the GHGs contribution of CA? ANN says the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) says (Author Not Named, undated, “Greenhouse Gas Reduction,” iaea.org):

Agriculture is both a victim of and a contributor to climate change. On the one hand, agricultural activities contribute approximately 30 per cent of total greenhouse gas emissions, mainly due to the use of chemical fertilizers, pesticides and animal wastes.

The IAEA says 30% is what CA contributes to the total GHGs of the world – If we worry only about so much destruction brought about by modern typhoons and not about what magnifies their furies, we are deceiving ourselves.

To fight climate change, as much as we can, we must do something about our CA practices!

On Facebook, Ramon Yedra, Director of Agribusiness and Marketing Assistance Service (AMAS) of the Department Of Agriculture (DA), shares “For Young Filipinos, #Futureofwork Is Farming,” the article by Kay Calpo Lugtu (21 April 2022, Manila Times, manilatimes.net). But I say, “For Young Filipinos, #Futureofwork is Regenerative Agriculture (RAg)! And organic agriculture is RAg.”

I say the AMAS has to exuberantly encouragethe youth to go into agriculture because it is a dismal career.

Why? Because state colleges & universities (SCUs) have not been teaching the youth how to make Agriculture lucrative! And so, just as our favorite farm/folk song goes on and on, “Planting rice is never fun!”

To make agriculture attractive to Filipinos, let us make it not only well-paying but also patriotic – by educating citizens not only about costs & returns, but also about how agriculture produces GHGs that directly cause climate change.

Why not the Agricultural Credit & Policy Council (ACPC) providing very easy loans to attract farmers to practice RAg? The ACPC will then be the Godmother of Primate Change!

In the last 113 years, since the founding of UP Los Baños in 1909, our SCUs have taught farmers to be good farmers but not good businessmen! So farming remains essentially a win-or-lose job. And they never teach how CA generates GHGs, so we continue practicing CA.

The problem is not with the youth – the problem is that agriculture is not an attractively high-paying job! And that is where RAg comes in.
(“Young Filipinos” image from Rappler, Rappler.com)

Just a simple arithmetic – RAg reduces fertilizer costs to minimum while it reduces GHGs to maximum; therefore, returns from RAg is maximum even as the generation of GHGs is at minimum.

RAg should be Agriculture’s RAGE!@517

24 April 2022

The New Agriculture – The Old Thinking!

Here come the Wait Watchers of Philippine Agriculture calling for “New Administration, New Agriculture” via Ernesto M Ordoñez, businessman columnist of the Inquirer (22 April 2022, “New Administration, New Agriculture,” business.inquirer.net). I say Mr Ordoñez, also AgriwatchChair, is 90% right in his assessment of PH Agriculture under Secretary of Agriculture William Dar. That remaining 10% belongs to Vision.

Mr Ordoñez reports well on the updated National Agriculture and Fisheries Modernization & Industrial Plan (NAFMIP) for 2021-2030 presented for approval by the DA on 18 April 2022. ANN says the proposal was prepared and consolidated by the National Agriculture & Fisheries Council (NAF) – (see Author Not Named, 19 April 2022, “NAF Council Recommends Endorsement Of NAFMIP For Approval Of DA Sec,” PCAF, pcaf.da.gov.ph).

Mr Ordoñez says:

Learning from the agriculture industry’s past performances will help improve the next administration’s governance.

Yes Sir, but the DA must not stop after studying the past PH Agriculture performance. Indeed, this DA did not stop. In fact, even before Mr Dar became Secretary of Agriculture, he already had in mind and in digital media his quite original “The New Thinking For Agriculture” that appeared in his column of 20 June 2019 in The Manila Times (manilatimes.net). Already on PH Agriculture, years before now Mr Dar was already thinking – and doing – ahead of all of us! What did the Bible say again? James 1:22 (NRSV): “But be doers of the word, and not merely hearers who deceive themselves.”
(“New Agriculture” image from Executive Yuan, English.ey.gov.tw)

Happily, Mr Ordoñez reports on the “guiding stars” of the New Agriculture Plan:

The first is “raising profitability and total incomes.”
The second guiding star is “promoting health and nutrition.”
The third guiding star is “environmental sustainability and resilience.”

If I may mention my own thinking on those 3 topics, I already have translated that Vision into 5 “Happy” issues (see my essay, “’For A Happy Philippines!’ Me Thinking Of PH Presidentiable’s Leadership & Ed Garcia Tinkering With The Qualifications Of BBM As Candidate For President. But First Of All, I Ask: ‘How Do We Make Agriculture Happy?’” 11 Feb 2022, Towards A New Eden, Blogspot.com):

1. Happy Soils
2. Happy Foods
3. Happy Air
4. Happy Environment
5. Happy Economics.

All that via? Organic Agriculture!

Mr Ordoñez then ends his column saying:

Though needing further adjustments, the improved [National Agriculture & Fisheries Modernization & Industrial Plan] should guide the new administration in birthing a new agriculture.

“In birthing a New Agriculture” sounds like the past 3 years with Secretary of Agriculture William Dar has been laboring helplessly with the Old Agriculture!

That is not fair. On 05 August 2019, when PRRD appointed him Secretary, Mr Dar already had “The New Thinking For Agriculture” as I mentioned earlier, with the following 8 supporting pillars/paradigms:

(1) Modernization
(2) Industrialization
(3) Promotion of exports
(4) Consolidation of small- and medium-sized farms
(5) Infrastructure development
(6) Higher budget & investment
(7) Legislative support
(8) Roadmap development.

Mr Dar is a visionary. When Mr Ordoñez calls for a “New Agriculture,” he is 3 years late!@517

23 April 2022

“The Glad State Of Filipino Farmers” – In Dealing With The Climate Crisis, With The Powers We Have In Our Minds & Hands, With Current Science & Technology, How Do We Make Our Farmers Happy Male Or Female?

In the field of Agriculture, people worry: the knowledgeable about Climate Crisis, farmers about destruction by typhoons of crops & dwellings, and scientists about declining yields. How do you resolve all that?

Last Thursday, I blogged my essay titled “’Copy Our Neighbors’ – Advice From Former NEDA Chief Cielito F Habito. My Advice: A Bigger DA Budget With Additional P50 Billion For Barangay-Based Organic Options” (21 April 2022, Towards A New Eden, Blogspot.com).

Among other things, I proposed an organic agriculture program I called “Barangay-Based Agriculture Revitalized with Organic Options Advancing Basic Intelligence In Living Intimately with Nature (BARO A BILIN) – Ilocano to English: “New Instructions.” I proposed an additional budget for the Department Of Agriculture (DA) of P50 Billion for BARO A BILIN alone.

On Facebook, 3 commented and 2 did not approve of the idea. How un/lucky can you get! Anyway, let’s hear from them:

Retired UPLB professor Teodoro “Ted” Mendozacommented:

Not that quick Frank. Soil OM [organic matter] has declined from.40 to 60%. Return all OM or crop residues is not enough. There is a need to add more to avoid yield drop.

Ted Mendoza is saying that all soil OM must be returned, or suffer the predictable yield decline.

Former PhilRice Executive Director Santiago R Obien (SRO), also UPLB alumnus, commented:

Agriculture – we balance the science and technology – the universe of plants and animals cannot be simplified into just one factor like Organics. We go step by step – it’s not elimination but balancing!

Perhaps SRO was overwhelmed by my proposed P50,000,000,000 budget for organic agriculture, so he failed to notice that BARO A BILIN is an additionalprogram, not designed to replace all programs of the DA. Neither did I say we eliminate chemical agriculture (CA) at once!  

A third reader and another UPLB alumnus, Reynaldo Mendoza commented:

For rice alone, it may be difficult to give some "straight/blanket" OM figures. As of 1998 (if I remember right), PSB/PH Seed Board has 220 Different Rice cultivars/ecotype recommendations. C4 is still around😀😀!! (Source: DA/ATI/BAR).Cheers!!

At least I can cheer somewhat. I’m glad Rey Mendoza points out that there are a great number of rice varieties/cultivars to choose from if you were worried about yields.

Whatever. I must emphasize that the last worry should be crop yieldwhen resorting to organic agriculture – the first worry should be farmer income!

Even assuming that the yield of the crop decreases, the total cost of organic agriculture is much lower than the total cost of chemical agriculture!

Gentlemen, never forget costs & returns. Therefore, with organic fertilizers much cheaper than chemical fertilizers, the farmer’s net income goes up even if his yield goes down!

Organic agriculture rewards the farmers, enriches our bodies with healthy foods – and impoverishes the climate of its greenhouse gases. With OA, aren’t we glad we are thrice winners?!@517
(Images: “Sad State of…” YouTube.com, “Happy farmer” Freepik.com)

22 April 2022

My Celebration Of “Earth Day” April 22 Comprises A Cerebration Of Natural Agriculture: “PH Has 165,000 Organic Farms!” – William Dar

In New Delhi, India on Wednesday-Thursday, 20-21 April, they held the “BioAg Asia 2022” conference with delegates from many Asian countries. I write & think, “How can BioAg be a celebration of Earth Day, which is Friday, 22 April 2022?”

I googled for “biological agriculture” and found zero source; I think the term was invented for the conference.

What about “natural agriculture”? ANN says PH Secretary of Agriculture William Dar gave the opening remarks (Author Not Named, 21 April 2022, “Phl Agri Chief Supports Bio-Agriculture As Key Strategy For Food Sustainability,’ DA.gov.ph) – actually, Mr Dar supported and enlarged the scope of BioAg 2022:

[He] encouraged more than 100 delegates from dozens of Asian countries to promote and implement natural and biological solutions to produce more with less, particularly in the judicious and balanced use of organic and inorganic farm inputs to enhance crop yields, ensure quality of produce, and subsequently increase farmers’ incomes.

The conference is on “biological agriculture” – the application of biological science & technology (S&T) on food production; nonetheless, Mr Dar intelligently interjected “natural… solutions to produce more with less.”

I am sure the BioAg delegates expected Mr Dar to talk only about “biological solutions” as the conference was so dedicated, but he has always been a bold mind and an original. When he was the Director General of ICRISAT, based in India, he came up with the intellectually enervating Vision – “Science with a human face.” With that as Guiding Star, from 2000 to 2014, Mr Dar’s outstanding servant leadership brought ICRISAT from dead last to #1 among 15 international agricultural research centers under the CGIAR, including the world-famous IRRI.

During the BioAg, he discussed what the PH DA has been doing in terms of utilizing S&T “to promote and implement biological and natural solutions to produce more with less, particularly in the judicious and balanced use of organic and inorganic farm inputs to enhance crop yields, ensure quality of produce, and subsequently increase farmers’ incomes.”

For Earth Day’s sake, I am more interested in organic farming. On this topic, Mr Dar said:

We have doubled our efforts in promoting organic farming through our National Organic Agriculture Program, and have posted the highest growing numbers of organic vegetable producers in the world with more than 165,000 organic farms.

The Philippines now has 165,000 organic farms, the world’s highest growing number! As a blogger Towards A New Eden, that’s heavenly music to my Filipino ears.
(towardsaneweden.blogspot.com)

ANN says also about BioAg 2022:

As the world faces the dilemma of dwindling yield and unproductive lands due to overuse of chemical inputs, key players in bio-agriculture in Asia have joined forces to discuss policy measures and come up with expeditious initiatives toward global food sustainability, with emphasis on environmental protection and biodiversity.

“Toward global food sustainability, with emphasis on environmental protection and biodiversity” – I think these are achievable with organic agriculture, to make possible:

Every single day Earth Day!@517
(“Make every day Earth Day” image from iStock, istockphoto.com
)

21 April 2022

“Copy Our Neighbors” – Advice From Former NEDA Chief Cielito F Habito. My Advice: A Bigger DA Budget With Additional P50 Billion For Barangay-Based Organic Options

For PH Agriculture, former PH Director General of the National Economic Development Authority (NEDA) Cielito F Habito has come up with the recommendation: “Copy Our Neighbors” (19 April 2022, Inquirer, https://inqm.news/xexq).

Mr Habito says:

One little piece of advice I have for our government, particularly in steering our agriculture sector toward greater dynamism, is simply to copy our neighbors.

Thank you Sir for the advice. If I may summarize you in 4 words, for PH agriculture: Big Budget, Big Science.

The Big Science of Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam of whose agricultural performance we are now “trailing” according to you, especially the value chain:

They [Malysians] have clearly long understood that agriculture authorities need to look at the farm system holistically with a full value chain perspective –  that is, “from field to fork” (I like to add “finance” before “field” as well.)

Yes Sir!

On the other hand, our Secretary of Agriculture William Dar started with a holistic approach to agriculture 2 months beforeAugust 2019 when PRRD appointed him Secretary. His Manila Times column contained “The ‘New Thinking’ For Agriculture” (13 June 2019, manilatimes.net) with accompanying contributory paradigms (see “Eight Paradigms of the Newly Appointed DA Secretary in Achieving Food Secure Country” (srs.gov.ph).

I have complete trust in Mr Dar as PH Secretary of Agriculture. Let us not forget that he was the Director General who brought ICRISAT from dead last to #1 among the 15 international agricultural research agencies under the CGIAR, the 15 including IRRI.

On the other hand, appreciating Mr Habito, I believe our dear Philippines needs An Agriculture Reborn. I am thinking of the predicted short supply of fertilizers with that “World War 3” in Ukraine right now disrupting among other things agricultural exports and imports.

Also, as Pratik Parija, Mai Ngoc Chau & Ditas B Lopez write (“Rising Fertilizer Costs Are Catching Up To Rice Farmers, Threatening Supplies,” 19 April 2022, Bloomberg,Bloomberg.com):

Soaring fertilizer costs have rice farmers across Asia scaling back their use, a move that threatens harvests of a staple that feeds half of humanity and could lead to a full-blown food crisis if prices aren’t curbed.

What I will advise Mr Dar right now is a new approach to PH Agriculture:

Barangay-Based Agriculture Revitalized with Organic Options Advancing Basic Intelligence In Living Intimately with Nature (BARO A BILIN). (Ilocano to English: “New Instructions.”)

Iam thinking of Mr Dar asking PH Govt for P50 Billion more for the 2022 DA budget, now P107 Billion. The P50 Billion will be spent thus:

(1)    Grants to farmer cooperatives for production of their own organic formulas;

(2)    Loans to organic farmers with zero interest for 3 years;

(3)    DA to produce organic formulas for communities without farmer cooperatives;

(4)    DA to purchase rights of existing organic formulations from private sources;

(5)    Digital Knowledge Bank and nationwide promotion of BARO A BILIN.

With BARO A BILIN, we will be cultivating A New & Prosperous PH Agriculture!@517

20 April 2022

April Is Filipino Food Month – Has The Department Of Agriculture Been Cultivating Filipino Food Giving Value To Cultural Heritage, Towards National Pride & Sense Of Belonging?

According to Presidential Proclamation 469 signed by PRRD on 13 April 2018, the month of April of every year is designated as “Buwan ng Kalutong Pilipino” or “Filipino Food Month.” My Ilocano mouth is watering, but I do not see any “food offering” by the Department Of Agriculture (DA) – not a program or activity to meaningfully celebrate the month. Why not?

(“Natural Food” image from Market Business News, marketbusinessnews.com)

In CNN Travel, Maida Pineda and Candice Lopez-Quimpo list“50 Dishes That Define The Philippines” (25 May 2016, CNN.com) (edited):

Adobo, Arroz Caldo, Bagnet, Balut, Betute, Bibingka,
Bicol Express, Buko Pie, Bulalo, [Camaron] Rebosado,
Champorado, Chicken Inasal, Crispy Pata, Dinuguan at Puto,
Empanada De Kaliskis, Ensaymada at Tsokolate, Fish Kinilaw,
Fish Tinola, Halayang Ube, Halo-Halo, Ilocos Empanada,
Inihaw na Liempo, Inihaw na Panga ng Tuna, Kamaro,
Kare-Kare, Kuhol sa Gata, Laing, Leche Flan, Lechon,
Longanisa, Lumpiang Ubod, Pan De Sal, Pancit Habhab,
Pancit Palabok, Pastillas De Leche, Pinakbet, Pork Barbecue,
Puto Bumbong, Relyenong Alimango, Sinanglay, Sinigang,
Sinugno, Sisig, Suman at Mang[g]a, Taba ng Talangka,
Tablea Tsokolate, Taho, Tapa, Tinolang T[u]gac, and Turon.

We have much & many Filipino foods to celebrate – where is the celebration?!

Thomas Kellersays, “A recipe has no soul. You must bring soul to the recipe.” Likewise, the Filipino Food proclamation has no soul; Filipinos must bring soul to Filipino food.

My way of celebrating April as Filipino Food Month is to point out that every bit of food can be the source of natural health for everyone. And the way for the DA to ensure that is? Promote organic agriculture more than ever before!

The top image says, “Pagkaing Pilipino: Susi Sa Pag-unlad At Pagbabago.” My free translation: “Filipino Food: Key To Progress & Meaningful Change.”

I do subscribe to natural food as key to progress and meaningful change. The lower image says, “Natural Food: Food from farms that don’t use artificial fertilizers, GMOs, pesticides, growth regulators or food additives.”

Brought to you by? Organic Agriculture!

And so, I am sort of expecting that OneDA, under Secretary of Agriculture William Dar, will officially declare that henceforth, organic farming shall be encouraged from Aparri to Jolo. So that the DA pronouncement is not simply hot air, henceforth I expect the DA to allot at least P50 Billion for the promotion of organic agriculture and the production of organic fertilizers that will be distributed at half cost of production to farmer cooperatives. (I prefer cooperatives to simply farmer associations because a coop has a board of directors where community interests are represented, while a farmer association is usually a one-man or one-group rule.)

According to Patricia Bianca Taculao (26 March 2022, “Celebrating Food, Culture, And The Filipino With The Filipino Food Month,” Manila Bulletin, MB.com.ph), the theme of the whole-month celebration is “Iba’t Ibang Luto, Pinoy ang Puso” (my free translation – “Different Recipes, Same Filipino Heart”).

Next year, it should read: “Different Natural Food Recipes, Same Filipino Healthy Heart!”@517

19 April 2022

Thesis: “Why Organic Farming Does Not Best Address Climate Change” – Genetic Literacy Project, American. Antithesis: “Why Organic Farming Does!” – Frank A Hilario, Filipino. Synthesis – American Farmers Are Abusing Organic Farming!

About organic agriculture (OA): Are you anti-OA? I am pro-OA. Are you scientific? Yes. And so am I!

On 30 March 2022, I sawthe Facebook sharing of Filipino science thinker Benigno Peczon: “Viewpoint: Organic Farming Best Addresses Climate Change? Why The Popular Consensus Is Wrong – And Why GE Crops Should Be Agriculture’s Future” (Henry Miller & Kathleen Hefferon, 23 March 2022, geneticliteracyproject.org). The authors are writing for the Genetic Literacy Project(GLP); Here’s the Thesis; the GLP authors say:

A prevalent “green myth” about organic agriculture is that it does not employ pesticides. Organic farming does, in fact, use insecticides and fungicides to prevent predation of its crops.

American OA employs chemicals to grow foods with the label “Organic” – what?! Americans are crazy!

Filipino, I am a BS Agriculture graduate of UP Los Baños (1965) and a very wide digital reader since 1997. For myself, I discovered organic agriculture in 1966 in the open shelves of the library of UP College of Agriculture, now UPLB, in the books of American gentleman farmer Edward H Faulkner: Plowman’s Folly (1943) and Soil Development (1952).

The GLP authors say:

More than 20 chemicals are commonly used in the growing and processing of organic crops and are acceptable under the US Department of Agriculture’s arbitrary and ever-shifting organic rules. Many of those organic pesticides are more toxic than the synthetic ones used in ordinary farming.

“More than 20 chemicals” – American “organic agriculture” is actually “chemical agriculture”!

The GLP authors blast American OA:

“The fatal flaw of organic agriculture is the low yields that cause it to be wasteful of water and farmland.”

The GLP authors cite 2014 data analyzed by Steven Savage of CropLife Foundation who reported:

In 59 of the 68 crops surveyed, there was a yield gap, which means that, controlling for other variables, organic farms were producing less than conventional farms.

The more glaring differences were these: strawberries produced 61% less, tangerines 58% less, cotton 45% less; and rice 39% less.

I accept the data. What I want to dispute is the way/s of organic farming that those American farmers employ. (That is also one reason I do not subscribe to organic produce being certified by a national body – the certification expense is unnecessary if you do it right, 100% organic!)

In any case, I am arranging for a group, nameless here yet, to sponsor a 5-ha organic techno demo farm in Bay, Laguna – near where we have the Los Baños Science Community: Asean Centre for Biodiversity, IRRI, PCAARRD, PhilRice Los Baños, Searca, and UP Los Baños. I am looking for a financial sponsor.

Of those 5 ha, 3 ha will be devoted to different organic farming methods; 1 ha to conventional chemical farming, and 1 ha to the organic layer initially created via rotavator (my OA origination since 1966).

Until then, eat your heart out with chemicals-laden farm crops & animals!@517

18 April 2022

ASENSO, The Sure-Fire Organic Fertilizer Formula For Helping Farmers Double, Even Triple Their Incomes Wherever They Farm In The Philippines

Today, I am convinced that the best way to help Filipino farmers rise from poverty is to start from the very beginning: Change very expensive chemical farming to very economical organic farming! (Additionally, I have a personal formula for an almost-free organic farming, but that can come later.)

56 years ago, I saw the great promise of organic agriculture (OA) for farmers foreign or Filipino – but I never seriously thought of how OA could enrich each and every farmer without fail. Today, I say, the PH government should be the organic husbandman!

I now recommend that the Department of Agriculture (DA) embark on a nationwide program for farmers to actually immediately embrace OA – now, it is wrong to think first of organic certification!
(“Embrace” image from adobestock.com.ph)

For my degree, I studied for BS Agriculture major in Ag Eduat the UP College of Agriculture, now UP Los Baños, from 1959 to 1964, or 5 years (I was “Extreme Delinquent” for 1 semester), graduating with a 2.36 WA (counting in the 5s) – I remember my mis/achievements, but I don’t remember OA being taught.

In 1966, while I was a Substitute Instructor in Horticulture, I hounded the open shelves of the library of UPCA/UPLB and discovered Edward H Faulkner’s “trash farming” in his 2 books published by the University of Oklahoma Press: Plowman’s Folly (1943) and Soil Development (1952). Trash farming has since invaded my mind – but, unfortunately, I have not been bold enough to push organic agriculture fervently in my country.

That was before. Right now I’m thinking of the PH DA – with the leadership of Secretary of Agriculture William Dar– embarking on a nationwide program for an organic agriculture program I now call ASENSO – Agrikulturang Syensya Entero Natural Sistemang Organiko.

With several billions of a dedicated budget from the national government, ASENSO will be implemented nationwide via farmers’ groups, associations, especially multi-purpose cooperatives funded via the Agricultural Credit & Policy Council(ACPC). The initial ASENSO assistances are not farmer loans – they are ACPC grants. (The ACPC will also ease financing for virtual agribusiness trainings for farmers.)

The organic fertilizers will be provided free to farmers for Year 1, or 2 planting seasons. After that, they will have to pay the approved coop price.

How much budget would this cost? If you have 10 million farmers, about P50 billion, where the total cost of farming can be loaned out to farmers with zero interest and is payable in 5 years.

To make sure that organic fertilizers (OF) are economical, the OF makers will first be competitively compared by actual plantings for the 1st season. The first 3 leading OFs by virtue of yield will then be mass-purchased from by the DA, the fertilizers to be distributed to farmer coops for grant purposes.

Now then – if a presidentiable made ASENSO a very audible/visible part of his/her campaign, s/he will gain millions of votes from farmers! S/he will then make great political ASENSO – in the name of PH Progress!@517

17 April 2022

“A Future Without Fertilizer Is A Wonderful World! And Yes, It’s Achievable Right Now, No Matter What World Experts Say!” – Frank A Hilario

Are you still swearing by chemical fertilizers? American scientists have been studying how to (1) avoid synthetic fertilizers, and (2) produce enough food for people, and (3) help resolve climate change.

I saw William Dar’sFacebook sharing of Friday, 15 April 2022 – Clinton Griffiths writing about “A Future Without Fertilizer?” (13 April 2022, agweb.com). Mr Griffiths enumerates the alternatives being studied in the US; “here are four ideas that someday could impact nitrogen needs” –

(1) mucus-like gel and bacteria (top image from agweb.com);
(2) ammonia-excreting bacteria;
(3) living mulch supplement with P&K;
(4) manure or manure-based fertilizer.

Mr Griffith says:

Pressure from costs, availability, regulations and environmentalists continue to squeeze synthetic fertilizer into a complicated future. Today farmers simply have limited alternatives. Tomorrow, the answer might be much different.

“Pressure from… environmentalists” – the reason being the greenhouse gases (GHGs) that chemical fertilizers cause to be generated when used. Agriculture guilty! Mr Griffiths says:

Currently, chemical fertilizer is the largest industry in global agribusiness and 1% of the world’s total energy is used to produce fertilizer. This process is quite wasteful, as plants only use a portion of the nitrates in the applied fertilizers and the rest often leaches into our groundwater, rivers, and streams, causing algal blooms that can suffocate aquatic life. This also leads to a situation in which the nitrogen not used by the crop can volatilize and become a greenhouse gas 300 times more potent than carbon dioxide, which is ultimately responsible for about 5% of global warming.

“Chemical fertilizer is the largest industry in global agribusiness” – therefore, I say, as an agriculturist and warrior writer for village development, chemical fertilizer is the largest industry that produces GHGs!

Mr Griffiths quotes Purdue University agronomist Tony Vyn as saying:

I do not see a future without synthetic fertilizers. I do see a future using more biologicals and preferably while we’re also making much better use of manure and manure-based fertilizers.

Differently, I Frank A Hilario, an alumnus of the University of the Philippines Los Baños, see a future without chemical fertilizers, zero. In fact, I have been proselytizing for organic agriculture in the last 57 years! Today I call my organic agriculture “Rotavator Organic WEALth” – for Weeds-Enriched Automatic Layer Triggering Terrestrial Health, which is inexpensively produced by a rotavator. Except the acronym “WEALth” and its meaning, I have been writing about organic farming for many years now; see my 20 July 2011 essay, “Crop Science Philippines. How Organic-Minded Are We?” A Magazine Called Love, Blogspot.com). WEALth is my 2021 packaging. WEALth is not organic fertilizer applied; it is 100% organic layer created during rotavation.

A future without fertilizer is a desirable future! A glorious state of being for the whole world! Above, lower image – taken 21-06-2018 at the Amancio Farm in Cordon, Isabela; owner Noemi Liangco right, my wife Ampy left – shows a forest of trees and weeds lushly growing without fertilizers, excellent indications that without Man’s chemicals, Mother Nature Knows Best!@517

16 April 2022

“I See Beyond The Climate Crisis From RAg To Riches Farming Villages!” – Frank A Hilario

Climate Change is for all of us young or old, rich or poor, educated or uneducated, 1st World or 3rd World – the Climate Crisis visits on those living in those First World skyscrapers as well as those in those Third World hovels. And yes, we are all guilty of a climate sin!

I just saw today (Good Friday) Inquirer’s Facebook sharing, “LOOK: The hashtag #LetTheEarthBreath tops Twitter's trending list in the Philippines as of 7 am today, April 15, as Filipinos join the worldwide climate change protests.” Inquirer says:

According to NASA climate scientist Peter Kalmus, on April 6, over 1,000 scientists from 26 different countries risked arrest for staging protests following the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's [IPCC] new report. … In Los Angeles, Kalmus and three other scientists chained themselves to the doors of the JPMorgan Chase building, the bank, which, according to him, provides the most funding to fossil fuel firms that leads to climate destruction.
(“Climate Change protests” image from YouTube)

Those scientists are entitled to their protests, but I will neverjoin them. Unlike Martin Luther’s unorganized“95 Theses” against my Roman Catholic faith, I am not protesting against the established order of blaming the users/abusers of fossil fuel for the climate crisis.

Instead of protest, I would rather protect the farms from continuing degradation of their natural bodies by returning to them their God-given riches – including the fungi and the worms!

If you ask me, a son of a Filipino farmer, an Agriculturist – BS Ag Edu, UP Los Baños ’65, Civil Service Professional ’64, a wide digital reader in the last 25 years, and already writing about Climate Change even before Al Gore and the IPCC co-won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2007 – I say:

Instead, I am launching a climate crusade literally in the lower grounds – right where much of greenhouse gases (GHGs) are produced – farms that season after season are enthusiastically coated with chemical fertilizers and unreservedly blanketed with chemical pesticides. The practice of chemical agriculture (CA) produces much greenhouse gases (GHGs). Christian Aid says, “The global food system contributes up to a third of our total [GHGs] and needs to change” (ReliefWeb, reliefweb.int).

Hereby, I am launching a “RAg To Riches Revolution” – where RAg is “Regenerative Agriculture.” RAg is essentially Organic Agriculture (OA), but I want to emphasize the regenerative aspect and the natural, physical & monetary wealths that follow OA.

“#LetTheEarthLive” is my hashtag. To let live requires:

1st, non-application of agricultural chemicals in farms and
2nd, return of natural materials to farms so they will live againand farmers’ crops & animals will live healthy livesas designed by Mother Nature.

What does Genesis1:11 say again?

And God said, Let the earth bring forth grass, the herb yielding seed, and the fruit tree yielding fruit after his kind, whose seed is in itself, upon the earth: and it was so. (NRSV)
(“Let the earth…” image from Knowingjesus.com)

RAg to Riches: With RAg, the Earth will produce nothing but natural wealths!@517

Watching Germanwatch watching Climate Change within countries of the world – unfortunately, it’s watching Effects , not Causes . Not how ...