This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 37, October 23-29, 2005
SPECIAL REPORT
If there’s anybody to blame
for making farm life in the Ifugao town of Alfonso Lista more and more miserable
today, it should be the Arroyo government for its aggressive promotion of GMO in
corn production in tandem with the TNC giant Monsanto and the Ayalas, among
other corporations.
BY FERNANDO BAGYAN AND LULU
GIMENEZ BAGUIO CITY - The
municipality of Alfonso Lista, known until recently as Potia, in Ifugao, hosts
relatively young settlements founded within the last eight decades. The first settlers on this
remote upland town in the Cordillera region, northern Philippines were Ilocanos
who were plucked by American colonial authorities in the 1920s to start an
agricultural colony. The colony was to replace indigenous shifting cultivation
with sedentary farming. Somewhat successful, the Ilocano farmers’ colony
eventually attracted Gaddang and Ibanag from the Cagayan Valley to the east, and
Kalinga from the Cordillera foothills to the north. From the 1950s to the
1970s, Bontok, Kankanaey, and Ibaloy from the Mountain Province and Benguet, and
Ifugao from the municipalities of Mayoyao, Banaue, Lagawe, and Kiangan, settled
here as well, drawn by reports of a warm place with a fertile land that could
yield more than the aged wet-rice terraces and over-tilled swidden sites of
their cold villages in the interior Cordillera. Today, nearly 65 percent of
the town’s land is devoted to agriculture. Roughly, half the agricultural land
is used for crop production; the other half for pasture. Rice used to be the
main produce. Now, corn occupies at least 63 percent of croplands. The only
crops that are still grown in the traditional way are bananas. The National Statistics
Office (NSO) branch in Ifugao reports that the total population of Alfonso Lista
as of 2004 was 24,151 individuals or 4,650 households. Almost all are peasant
households who own the land they till under homestead patents received from
government for settling in the area. Modern corn breeds spread
to Alfonso Lista from Isabela, where agriculture authorities promoted them
through various campaigns. These included Maisan (Corn Country) 77, the Ramos
government’s Medium Term Agricultural Development Program, the Estrada
government’s Agrikulturang Makamasa (Agriculture for the Masses), and most
recently, Macapagal-Arroyo’s Ginintuang Masaganang Ani (Golden Harvest of
Plenty). The breeds that first
gained entry were the public varieties developed by the University of the
Philippines Institute of Plant Breeding. Soon these were replaced by
corporate-developed varieties – specifically those of San Miguel Corporation,
Corn World, Pioneer Hy-Brid, East-West, Cargill, Monsanto, and Syngenta. With
the seeds came the chemicals purposely designed for them. From 1997 to 2000, monocrop
production of corn expanded by 253 percent, and production volume rose by more
than 1,000 percent. (See Table ) The use of high-input
varieties in Alfonso Lista has not significantly altered the traditional,
peasant pattern of land tenure in the area: almost all households here still own
most of the land they till. Under the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law, the old
homestead patents were merely subdivided, with each lot covering at least 24
hectares. Most landholdings planted
to corn range from one-half to three hectares. Some households with less than a
hectare rent additional land from those with larger holdings. In general, implements used
by corn farmers still include the simple plow, harrow, and carabao, and
traditional handheld tools. But some modern mechanical equipment have been
introduced, like small tractors and row planters, backpacked sprayers, threshers
and shellers. Not owning any vehicle at
all, most households hire truckers, paying them at a rate of P1 ($0.02, based on
an exchange rate of P55.71 per U.S. dollar) for every kilo of corn transported.
The dealers to whom the corn is to be delivered own some of the trucks.
All corn-producing peasants
in Alfonso Lista grow high-input varieties because they find these more
productive and marketable. Some are GMOs, but the majority are simple hybrids.
The peasants of Alfonso
Lista were introduced to genetically-engineered varieties of corn by
agricultural input suppliers in Isabela who entered into dealership contracts
with the corporations that developed these, the promotions personnel of those
corporations and the agricultural officers of government. Bt corn was brought to
Isabela by Monsanto. This was during the field trials the company conducted in
the year 2000. In 2003, Monsanto’s Dekalb Yieldgard (DK 818 YG) reached Alfonso
Lista. Two years later, however,
Bt corn has yet to become the seed of choice in the area. Farm operators choose
it only when they are late in starting their crop, and the crop is thus more
vulnerable to weather problems and pests. Many peasants of Alfonso
Lista avoid Bt corn because they have experienced severe itching when handling
the plants in the course of crop care and during threshing; also when handling
the corn grain during shelling and drying. In addition, they have heard reports
from fellow corn producers that there have been cases in the neighboring
municipality of Lamut of carabaos that died after eating the vegetative parts of
the corn, and of cattle’s hooves being cut when trampling corn stubbles in newly
harvested fields. Moreover, the seeds of DK
818 YG cost about twice as much as other corn seeds (P4,650 or $83.47 vs.
P2,300-P2,800 or $41.28-$50.26 per 18-kilogram sack). The herbicides required in
the care of the crop are also more expensive (P1,350 vs P250 to P900 per 1-liter
bottle). The Bacillus thuringensis in Bt corn transfers to any weeds surrounding
the corn plots and makes these weeds just as sturdy as the corn crop. It is
therefore necessary to use a very powerful herbicide that is specifically
formulated to kill “Bt weeds.” The peasants of Alfonso
Lista are still unaware of reports that the Bacillus thuringensis protein in Bt
corn can be transferred to other plants, including any food crops that they grow
near their corn fields for their own households’ consumption. Neither are they
aware of the findings that the antibiotic markers which allowed the Bacillus
thuringensis protein to get spliced into corn DNA can significantly reduce the
ability of both people and livestock who consume Bt corn grain to make use of
antibiotics like Streptomycin. It is possible that if they were to be made aware
of the aforesaid findings, the peasants of Alfonso Lista will become even less
receptive to Bt corn than they are at present, notwithstanding the aggressive
promotion of this GMO by their agricultural input suppliers, Monsanto, and
government. Most of the corn farmers of
Alfonso Lista lack money to spend on the inputs they need and thus have to avail
of credit. However, there are no credit institutions within the municipality.
Both government and private agencies have tried to establish cooperatives here
but those that they started went bankrupt due to mismanagement. Some of the peasants get
credit from the Santiago, Isabela branch of Quedancor, the Quedan and Rural
Credit Guarantee Corporation that used to be attached to the DA but has been
re-organized by Macapagal-Arroyo and placed directly under her office. Its main
function is to provide credit for endeavors that are in line with the
President’s agricultural modernization priorities. Most peasants prefer to
enter into a credit arrangement with one of Santiago’s agricultural input
dealers. Under the deal, the creditor will provide all the inputs at an interest
of 30 percent per cropping, and the debtor is obliged to sell his or her crop to
the creditor even if other dealers offer higher prices. No collateral is
needed. Reneging on the terms of
the loan will have dire consequences, however. The debtor will be blacklisted by
the creditor and lose access to future loans if the debtor is unable inability
to deliver his or her harvest and pay the loan. The loan will then have to be
paid at the next harvest - double the interest. Meantime, the debtor will have
to take out another loan to produce the next crop that he or she must deliver. The
government’s responsibility Government has played a key
role in promoting modern corn breeds among the peasants of Alfonso Lista.
The Municipal Agricultural
Office (MAO) of Alfonso Lista has conducted field trials and technology
demonstrations using different corn seeds provided free by the agricultural
input producing firms Monsanto (through its Philippine research partner, Ayala),
Syngenta, Pioneer, Corn World, and BioSeed, plus Asian Hybrid. In addition, the
MAO has been selling these firms’ corn seeds to first-time users among Alfonso
Lista’s peasants at a subsidy, for only half the prevailing market price.
The experiences of
corn-producing peasants in Alfonso Lista underscore the negative effects of the
Philippine government’s promotion of the market-oriented production of modern
plant breeds through its agricultural modernization programs. No such modernization is
taking place, however. The programs just promote the intensive use of inputs
which can only be acquired after spending so much. To access the inputs, the
peasants thus need access to credit. Nowadays, the Philippine government,
through Quedancor, offers such credit, but on conditions that include the
surrender of collateral in the form of landed property – a condition that
peasants coming from indigenous Cordillera cultures find hard to live with.
Worse, in a market flooded
with cheap imports, the prices of the peasants’ produce have become inelastic.
Most likely, they will earn only enough for their households’ subsistence. Most
likely, they will have to again borrow money or inputs for their next harvest. Not only is debt repeatedly
incurred; the debt continually increases as the peasants get caught in a pattern
of increasing loan-dependent input utilization. It may not have happened
yet in Alfonso Lista, but in other parts of the Cordillera , peasants have also
become dependent on credit for access to the most basic subsistence goods. This
is particularly true along the Vegetable Belt that extends from La Trinidad in
Benguet northward to Bauko in the Mountain Province and eastward to Tinoc in
Ifugao. Clearly, the situation in
the Cordillera shows the risks that peasants face when they give up producing
food for their own consumption and abandon the diversified cropping system
traditional to peasant agriculture. With research from APIT TAKO Ifugao
Organizing Committee / Nordis / Bulatlat
Table 1. Monocrop production of corn Year
Crop Area (hectares)
Percentage of Total Agricultural Land Area
Volume of Production (metric tons)
TotalValue at Current Prices (pesos)
6,497
24%
10,647
37,000,000 - 80,000,000 2000
16,467
63%
131,736
461,076,000 - 988,020,000
Source: Alfonso Lista Municipal Agriculture Office
© 2005 Bulatlat
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Aggressive GMO Promotion is Making Ifugao Corn
Farmers Poorer
Conclusion
Northern Dispatch
Posted by BulatlatAnalyzing the terrain
Use of high-input varieties like Bt corn
First of two parts