Regaining lost coconuts
with PCA Bohol’s PCCP
TAGBILARAN
CITY, Bohol, January 3,(PIA)—For all the years that Boholanos have been
wantonly cutting coconut trees for lumber, the Philippine Coconut Authority
(PCA) is now averaging the replanting of 314 coconut seedlings a day under
their Participatory Coconut Planting Project (PCPP) in 2019.
PCA
information Officer Jose Allan Cajilog bared this during the recent information
sharing in time for the annual year-end evaluation and get together for the
Association of United Development Information Officers in Bohol held at Vita
Isola Resort in Panggangan Island, Loon last month.
Cajilog
said that in 2019, through their PCPP, PCA has accounted 114,658 coconut
seedlings already germinating and are ready for transfer or are already
transplanted in a one square meter pit, as to the registry the agency has for
the year.
Through
the PCPP, the government envisions to encourage and support coconut farmers and
potential coconut farmers in planting and replanting coconut trees.
The
government, through the PCA intends to do this in a participatory strategy and
gives incentives to participants who adopt the program guided by the PCA
recommended Good Agricultural Practices (GAP).
Individual
coconut farmers, be they landowners, owner-tiller, tenants or coconut farmers organizations
and cooperatives, agrarian reform beneficiaries (ARBs), integrated social forestry
(ISF) beneficiaries and indigenous peoples who can put up equity contributions
like a planting area for coconuts of at least 0.5 hectares to a maximum of 10
hectares, can show proof of land ownership (if landowner or owner-tiller, ARBs
and ISFBs) or landowner's letter of consent (if tenant), can apply and register
for the program, Cajilog explained.
Participants
must also have ready available source of good quality seed nuts and planting
materials and must be willing to adopt PCA recommended technologies on seed nut
nursery establishment and maintenance and transplanting and management of
seedlings, PCA website added.
When
it is participatory, program participants need to provide counterpart funds in
the form of seed nuts and labor for nursery operations and maintenance and
transplanting.
For
this, PCA pays for every seed nut germinated and are about to be transferred,
plus another batch for six months after the seeds have been transplanted, total
amount of incentives payable after five years after or when the palm reaches
its productive stage.
Under
the program, in 2019 alone, the PCA accounted for 114,658 coconut seedlings
already set for transplanting or are already planted.
For
this, the PCA has allocated almost P4.6 million in incentives for these
Boholano coconut farmers who have registered under the program, according to
Cajilog.
Aside
from the PCPP, PCA also continues with its Coconut Seedlings Dispersal Program
(CSDP) to coconut farmers where 14,600 dwarf coconut seedlings have been given
within the year.
This,
according to Cajilog costs the government some P1.2 million.
Despite the slump in the copra price in the world market, PCA is still hopeful that a recovery is nearing, local authorities assured.
In
the meantime, the government is giving out 9,000 bags of organic fertilizer to
coconut farmers even as the PCA is now urging farmers to intercrop coffee or
cacao under the coconut trees, to increase incomes and cover the low prices of
copra.
This
year, Cajilog said coconut farmers received 20,800 coffee seedlings and some
200 bags of complete fertilizers for the intercrops. (rahc/PIA-7/Bohol)
LOSING
NO HOPE. From a wonder tree, coconuts are now in the slump with world market
prices plummeting. Despital all this, the PCA believes it may change anytime
and in the interim, a plan to introduce inter-crops in the coconut farms are
now working wonders for the farmers, like the corn this farmer is adopting.
(PIABohol/foto by PCA Bohol)

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