.RP coconut agencies: Same bananas
| DIE HARD III | 
| Herman Tiu Laurel | 
In the first quarter of 2009, Philippine coconut exports plunged 60 percent whereas total revenues in 2008 reached $1.5 billion. It is thus alarming to note this decline in 2009. Tragically, very little is heard from those in government charged with ensuring that the coconut industry of the Philippines prospers and grows.
I have  been involved in the advocacies for the coconut industry for the past  several years, seeing it not only as an agricultural commodity with the  greatest potential to raise the national per capita income but also as  an industrial raw material that can multiply our nation’s income from  our 340 million or so coconut trees. If only the country develops all of  the Philippine coconut’s potentials in terms of cosme-ceuticals,  nutra-ceuticals, pharmaceuticals, and industrial chemicals, it may well  rival the BPOs in dollar earnings at $10 billion, if not more.
In  2009, I attended a series of meetings of coconut industry and  government leaders, where it was once held at the Philippine Coconut  Authority (Philcoa). Representatives from the Coconut Industry  Investment Fund (CIIF) and Congress were there, as was the staff of  Philcoa — yet the Philcoa head was never around. Rep. Leonardo  Montemayor was very active in those meetings. But I never got to see the  Philcoa head either in any of the other activities conducted by the  coconut sector organizations.
If you ask around  today who heads the Philcoa, very few people will be able to give you an  answer, unlike in previous administrations where the agency’s  administrator was among the most recognizable public figures.
Sadly,  an even more significant government coconut agency that has also been  led by lackluster characters is the CIIF, which controls the funds of the sector.
We  need to revive the public and government’s consciousness about the  coconut industry and its bountiful potentials. The first 100 days of the  new administration has slowly ticked by yet nothing is heard about its  policies for this sector. The coconut sector has already suffered by  omission during the inaugural speech and the State of the Nation Address  of this new government. It therefore leads many to ask if the PeNoy  administration has anybody in its team with coconuts at all.
If  they don’t, then it’s high time they get some coconuts: The Philippine  Coconut Week’s festivities are slated on Aug. 12 to 15 of this week, and  the welfare of 25 million Filipinos directly and indirectly dependent  on the coconut industry for livelihood (that’s over 25 percent of the  population of 90 million) are staked in the success or failure of this  effort to bring the vital issues of the coconut industry to the  attention of our national leaders.
As I have  written many times before, and discussed in our Global News Network  (GNN) show, the coconut tree is a tree of unbounded potentials. Its  water is the healthiest natural drink which provides a thousand times  more nutrients than sports drinks like Gatorade or Powerade. The  Taiwanese and Chinese know this better than many Filipinos; hence, they  import our coconuts even at a premium price.
Virgin  Coconut Oil (VCO) is a fantastic health supplement that neutralizes HIV  and, as recently discovered by Western medicine, Alzheimer’s disease. I  take VCO every day and have my own adobo formulation where I mix minced  garlic, coco vinegar, and calamansi with over three tablespoons of VCO.
I use VCO on my hair as well before bathing, and I am the only one who doesn’t need to use hair dye among 10 siblings.
VCO’s  potent health values are well understood, but its popularity has ebbed  due to lack of promotion and advertising, as well as, due to deliberate  sabotage by Big Pharma in cahoots with some Department of Health  authorities.
Other parts of the coconut are also  valuable: Its sap produces sugar of the best glycemic quality (30 in the  index) for health. Its husks as mattings could have been used in the  massive oil gush in the Gulf of Mexico if there had been enough supply,  though these are already used to prevent soil erosion and in re-greening  desert areas. It is much sought after in cosmetics for the finest oil  is provides.
Of even greater potential is the  coconut’s industrial and chemical application (even for industrial  explosives), which could be produced in the Philippines if basic  infrastructure were to be provided.
On Tuesday,  Aug. 10, the “Politics (and Economics) Today” episode on GNN will  feature a discussion on “Coconut: The Savior Commodity” with coconut  sector leaders Sonny Villariba, Gerry Natividad, and Joey Faustino. I  call the coconut “the savior commodity” as it has the potential to save  the national economy. And unlike BPOs which are a servant industry  dependent on the industrial economies, the coconut sector is a  production industry and when developed to its fullest promotes economic  independence, reduces imports, expands import substitution (such as  replacing the $1-billion milk and related imports), multiplies layers of  values from processed coconut exports, and builds the domestic  industrial and chemical industries.
The potentials  of the coconut industry to save the economy and the nation will never  be realized if the “same bananas” stay on in the government coconut  agencies. This sector needs leadership that knows its coconuts and knows  how to use those coconuts.
(Reprinted with permission from Mr. Herman Tiu-Laurel)
Source: The Daily Tribune
URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100809com4.html

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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