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DJ China To Grow Rice,Corn In Philippines;Keen On Sugar Cane
[November 20, 2006]

DJ China To Grow Rice,Corn In Philippines;Keen On Sugar Cane


(Comtex Energy Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge) MANILA, Nov 20, 2006 (Dow Jones Commodities News via Comtex) --China is firming up plans to start developing next year 200,000 hectares of farmland in the Philippines for rice and corn production, an investment that will require around PHP4 billion ($80 million), Philippine Agriculture Secretary Arthur Yap said Monday.

The plan is part of a larger body of agricultural agreements to be formalized signed during the visit of Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao for the 12th Asean Summit, to be held in the Philippines Dec. 11-13, Yap said.

Total investment could reach PHP9 billion, he added.


Beidahung Group, the corporate arm of China's Heilongjiang provincial government, is keen on developing 100,000 hectares of land for rice production and another 100,000 hectares for corn, Yap told reporters.

A formal letter of intent has already been signed by Beidahung, said Yap, who just returned from a week-long official visit to China.

According to Yap, the agriculture department is now in the process of identifying farmlands in northern Luzon that will be devoted to this project.

"We would want them to develop new areas as much as possible," Yap said.

At a development cost of around PHP20,000 a hectare, the project could cost PHP4 billion, he said.

Meanwhile, the agriculture department of Guangxi region in southern China has expressed an intention to develop 40,000 hectares of land in the Philippines for cassava or sugar cane production to make ethanol, a gasoline additive derived from agricultural feedstock, Yap said.

"The ethanol will be used in China," he said.

Yap said he was also able to obtain from Guangzhou Tianhe Yin Xin Fiber Product Co. a commitment to buy 100,000 metric tons of coconut coir at $400/ton.

Coconut coir, a fiber with high water holding capacity, is used in China by farmers struggling with parched farmlands.

He said the Philippine Fisheries Development Authority is also preparing a three-phase package for the repair, rehabilitation and expansion of Navotas Fishport Complex, to be financed partly by China National Constructional and Agricultural Machinery Import and Export Corp.

Meantime, Philippine tropical fruits will now enjoy market access to China through the Guangzhou Jiangnan Fruit and Vegetable Market Development Co., where 80% of China's fresh fruits are traded.

The 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

Leaders from China, Japan, South Korea, India, Australia and New Zealand will also join Asean heads of state for the East Asia Summit Dec. 13 in Cebu, the Philippines.

-By Rhea Sandique-Carlos, Dow Jones Newswires; 63-918-9014158; [email protected]

-Edited by Ryan Woo

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

11-20-06 0225ET

Copyright (c) 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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