MANILA may sign a rice-supply agreement with Phnom Penh next week, the Department of Agriculture (DA) said on Wednesday.
“If
I’ll be given the authority [to sign the agreement] by the President,
we might sign it next week,” Agriculture Secretary Proceso J. Alcala
told reporters at the sidelines of the opening of the 45th Annual
Meeting of the Board of Governors of Asian Development (ADB) held in
Pasay City.
The Philippines has
an existing rice-supply agreement with Vietnam and Thailand. Hanoi has
agreed to supply Manila as much as 1.5 million metric tons (MMT) of
rice, while Thailand could supply a maximum of 1 MMT, depending on their
available stocks.
The
DA chief said the signing of the rice-supply agreement between the
Philippines and Cambodia could be pushed back until the third week of
May.
“But if a
situation will arise that may compromise our local inventory, the
agreement may be signed sooner that expected,” he said.
Alcala
said the government will probably buy the remaining 120,000 metric tons
(MT) of the original import volume of 500,000 MT from Vietnam, Cambodia
and Thailand under a government-to-government arrangement.
Manila
could initially buy 70,000 MT from either Vietnam or Thailand or from
both countries and purchase the remaining 50,000 MT from Cambodia.
Alcala
said he met with the Cambodian ambassador to the Philippines recently
to discuss Phnom Penh’s request to allow it to export rice via a special
trade arrangement.
He said the trade arrangement “may not involve money” as the two countries could “swap preferred agricultural products.”
“Once
the agreement is signed, the Philippines can actually pay in kind. I
understand [Cambodia] needs poultry products as well as fertilizers,”
said Alcala.
The
National Food Authority (NFA) Council has authorized the importation of
as much as 500,000 MT of rice for 2012 to beef up the country’s rice
supply prior to the lean months for palay.
The
NFA has already auctioned off a total of 380,000 MT of milled rice on
behalf of the private sector. The remaining volume would have to be
bought under a government-to-government deal.
Under the importation guidelines, the imported rice should arrive in the Philippines not later than June 30.
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