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High Value Crops: Abaca Industry in the Philippines
High Value Crops: Abaca Industry in the Philippines
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This roadmap sets the direction for the Philippine abaca industry. It
encompasses industry analyses, benchmarking and supply/value chain. This
roadmap identified the potential areas intended for planting and treatment
of diseases which are the two most important factors in abaca fiber
production.
A broad range of private and public sector groups contributed to the
production of this document which sets forth new policy, capacity and
capability priorities for the Philippine abaca industry.
Coordination and analysis of the inputs, organization of the workshops,
and preparation of this document were carried out by PhilFIDA. Stakeholders’
meetings and workshops were hosted and facilitated by PhilFIDA Regional
Offices.
Where are we now?
Abaca, internationally known as Manila hemp, is endemic to the
Philippines. The Philippines dominates the global abaca trade as the country
supplies about 87.5 percent of the world’s abaca fiber requirements and
Ecuador and Costa Rica the remaining 12.5 percent as of 2016. In 2016, abaca
was planted on 180,302 hectares (ha) with production reaching 72,000 metric
tons (MT).
The abaca farm structure is classified as a small farm which is owned and
managed by individual farmers. It has an average area of 1.6 hectare for
every farmer. There are only few farms established and managed by
cooperatives or associations with areas ranging from 10 to 100 hectares.
Almost one third of the abaca areas can be found in Region V or the
Bicol Region with 52,493 hectares. The land area is comparable to combined
abaca areas of Regions XIII, XI, XII and VI. Most of the abaca areas in Bicol are
heavily concentrated in Catanduanes, comprising more than 60 percent of
the total area of the region. At present, Catanduanes is the biggest abaca
producing province contributing 35 percent of the total production, followed
by Davao Oriental with about 8.5 percent. Due to frequent typhoons in Bicol
and Leyte, there are moves by some abaca factories and investors to look for
alternative areas to plant abaca.
Exports of abaca fiber and manufacture generated an average of
US$97.1 million per year in the last ten years. Some US$84.9 million came from
abaca manufactures such as pulp, cordage, yarns, fabrics and fibercrafts. The
remaining US$12.2 million was from raw fiber exports. Europe, specifically, the
United Kingdom, is the premier destination of abaca fiber followed by Asia,
THE PHILIPPINE ABACA INDUSTRY ROADMAP 2018-2022 ii
with Japan as the leading buyer. All abaca pulp was exported for specialty
paper manufactures.
Since 1991, local pulp mills had been importing abaca and sisal fiber
from Ecuador except in 2005. The pulp processor resorted to importation to
address the deficiency in local supply of specific grades and meet buyers’
specifications.
On local benchmarking, a total of 1,000 abaca plants with a distance of
3.0x3.0m are planted to a hectare and intercropped with coconut, fruit trees
and leguminous plants. The typical farm uses suckers, corms, tissue culture
plantlets as planting materials. The good farm uses seeds, tissue culture
plantlets, suckers and corms. Care and maintenance of the plantation in
typical farming is minimal compared to good farming which is properly
managed.
Harvesting is done every six months for the typical farm and every three
to four months for the good farm. The first harvest is done on 18-24 months
after planting.
Local Benchmarking, Abaca Farming: Typical vs. Good (Qualitative Parameters)
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Qo6w6mchqj_D83QIBgkNC5Q2lkBRCBDO/view
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