PUERTO PRINCESA CITY, Palawan, Philippines 鈥 When Typhoon Odette (international name: Rai) battered central and northern Palawan in mid-December last year, coastal farmers lost all of the seaweeds they were growing, leaving them with very little to start with as they try to propagate a new batch of these marine plants.
Odette鈥檚 onslaught resulted in unprecedented agricultural damage of up to P3 billion throughout , affecting 5,532 seaweed farmers who rely primarily on their farms as their single source of livelihood.
Jhay-R Timbang, chair of Star of the North Agriculture Cooperative in the coastal village of Pularaquen in Taytay town, was among the thousands of individuals who are still struggling to recover from the impact of the typhoon, the strongest to have hit the country last year.
Timbang, along with thousands of coastal farmers throughout the province whose seaweed farms had been decimated, received P2,000 as aid from the provincial government.
鈥淲e received P1,000 earlier today (Feb. 14). This is already the second batch from the local government. The first was food assistance also worth P1,000,鈥 he said in a text message on Monday.
鈥淭yphoon Odette destroyed all of our seaweeds. Until today, we are still trying to recover鈥攕alvaging what鈥檚 left because we do not have source of seedlings to start our production again,鈥 Timbang said in an earlier interview.
Seedlings needed
Like some seaweed farmers in their local cooperative, Timbang was forced to find other alternative sources of income to provide for the needs of his family. He has been raising native chickens, he said.
However, the farmers remained primarily concerned on rehabilitating their seaweed farms, lacking available seedlings (propagules/cuttings) locally.
Rodrigo Longcayana, leader of seaweed farmers in Sitio Amogues in the coastal village of Calawag in Taytay, also cries for help with almost P2 million losses in seaweed facilities and agrifisheries machinery.
鈥淲e wanted to know how to get help because if this continues, we will be helpless for years to come. We are asking help from everyone who can and willing to help us,鈥 he said.
Provincial agriculturist Romeo Cabungcal said Odette severely affected the province鈥檚 agriculture sector, particularly its high-value crops and agrifisheries.
Top producer
鈥淲e are prioritizing here the provision of seaweed seedlings but the problem is we don鈥檛 have a source in the province where we could get the seedlings. We will be sourcing out from other provinces,鈥 Cabungcal said in an interview early this month.
Data from the Department of Agriculture鈥檚 Bureau of Agricultural Statistics showed that since 2008, Palawan has been the top producer of seaweeds in the country with 444,355.44 metric tons, comprising around 27 percent of the national production.
Seaweed farming in the province is dominated by small farmers, with an average farm size of 2,500 square meters (0.25 hectare), generating employment for around 85 percent to 90 percent of 17,459 coastal families.
鈥楩loating bank account鈥
Seaweed is a cash crop, which locals usually refer to as a 鈥渇loating bank account,鈥 because they are assured of income as long as they can harvest seaweed. A line of seaweed can be propagated into 10 lines in just six months, giving farmers a choice of expanding their farm quickly, selling for cash or trading for goods.
Ordinary seaweed price ranges between P12.50 and P13 a kilo for low-class seaweed species like 鈥渂utay,鈥 鈥渆spinoso鈥 and 鈥渕ilyon-milyon.鈥 The giant brown-orange seaweed, locally known as 鈥渟akul,鈥 is the most sought after, its price ranging from P42 to P50 a kilo.
During the peak season between April and May, prices would even reach up to P80 to P100 a kilo, with each seaweed roll generating up to P6,000 per farmer.
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