Fertilizer industry’s woes may stunt aggie se

The over P11 billion fertilizer industry is now in the doldrums as it is plagued with a plethora of problems that is undercutting its capacity to support government thrust to boost agricultural production and reduce widespread poverty.

Facing the onslaught of problems is the chemical fertilizer industry, in particular, which still accounts for about 95 percent of the industry; organize fertilizers account for only five percent.

One problem is the objection of diehard environmentalists who want to scrap chemical fertilizers altogether without realizing the industry is still vital to the success of agriculture.

Raul "Jun" V. Aristorenas Jr., president of the Fertilizer Industry Association of the Philippines (FIAP), vehemently argues during its recent conference that they have been "much-maligned and unfairly lumped together with toxic chemical pesticides and accused as mostly multinational firms."

With due respect to purists pushing for total shift to organic fertilizers, recent studies by agricultural scientists led by Dr. Rogelio N. Concepcion, director of the Bureau of Soils and Water Management (BSWM), show that "balanced fertilization" mixing organic and chemical fertilizers according to specific crop and soil types is the ideal and scientific approach that achieves the best results.

Even Dr. Severino Magat, one of the country’s top agricultural scientists, reveals that "some soil types can take organic fertilizers solely 100 percent, but in others they are inadequate and ineffective. And there are 500 types of soils, many of them requiring specific chemical fertilizer grades."

Concepcion notes that "it is true, chemicals have damaged many farmlands, but this is because the same fertilizer grades have been used for three decades. There is an overdose of the same ingredients in fertilizers, but a depletion in the soil’s nutrients that need to be replaced with other fertilizer grades of nutrients."

A bigger problem faced by the industry is the current "price-cost squeeze." Costs of operations have soared the past years, while prices have even dropped in real terms, thus affecting profitability. Alarico S. Lim, another FIAP member, says profit margins, which used to be 10-15 percent have dropped to a fragile two percent.

Antonio M. Kosca Jr., president of Atlas Fertilizer and Chemicals Inc., said "we used to buy our need at P26 to a dollar but now we are paying at over P50 to a dollar." Being petroleum-based, the industry is import-dependent by 80-90 percent and is thus greatly affected by peso depreciations. Estanislao J. Chupungco, a FIAP consultant, added that "for every peso depreciation, costs of fertilizer Products increase by P6 to P7 per 50-kg. bag."

Kosca also noted they could not just pass on easily their additional costs to farmers as they may complain and stop buying. "Out of our selling prices of P400 per bag, we only make P10 per bag," he said. He revealed that had it not been for the entry of Japanese investors into their company they could have probably closed shop already.

Dr. Walfredo R. Rola of UP Los Baños, revealed statistics showing the continued deterioration of the industry. He noted that while volume production increased steadily from 934,346 tons in 1990 to 1.6 million tons in 1996, it suddenly dropped by almost 22 percent to 1.25 million tons in 2000.

Similarly, sales which were earlier increasing steadily from 1991 to 1997, declined suddenly and continuously during the 1998-2000 period. If not arrested through agricultural programs that will help boost anew the demand for fertilizers, this declining trend will continue onwards as farmers are already squeezed too much. Farmers can no longer afford to spend more on farm inputs, particularly fertilizers.

Even fertilizer exports, which should compensate for a collapsing local market, have also steadily declined from 717,578 metric tons in 1990 to only 232,638 metric tons in 1990 to only 232,638 MT in 2000.

Other problems faced by the industry are more structural like inadequate port facilities, poor roads and related infrastructure, inefficient transport system, etc. Also adding to the burden are shrinkage, pilferage, and unnecessary but costly "tong" protection, all of which add up to the overall distribution costs.

Chupungco revealed that "moving stocks interisland down to a dealer’s store alone already cost as much as P50 per bag." Inventory costs is another P25 per bag.

And once fertilizers reach the farm levels, a host of problems again make their usage ineffective. Farmers lack financing to buy inputs, while fertilizer firms lack the resources to conduct training and technology transfers. Government extension workers can no longer be relied upon for support as they have now been devolved with the local government units.

Two other serous problems are the dumping of cheaper imports from China and Korea and the decades-old restriction on new fertilizer grades.

All these problems are putting the tottering industry on the verge of collapse that could possibly compromise efforts to boost agricultural production. PAJ News Service

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