NDA allocates almost 500 million to the development of four dairy cattle breeding farms.
PH designates land for dairy farming to increase milk sufficiency
PH designates land for dairy farming to increase milk sufficiency

The National Dairy Authority (NDA) is allocating nearly half a billion for the development of four dairy livestock breeding farms in Luzon and Mindanao, which are scheduled for completion by 2025.

In a message to the Inquirer, the NDA said it earmarked a total of P498 million to establish four breeding farms designed to scale up local dairy production.

“They are being established this year and hopefully, it will be operational by next year,” it said.

Properties

The government set aside four properties to the NDA, a government-owned and controlled corporation attached to the Department of Agriculture (DA), for building these breeding farms.

In Department Order No. 11, the NDA was ordered to help develop government properties assigned to the agriculture sector for dairy farming and forage development: a 50-hectare property situated within the Peñaranda River Forest Reserve in General Tinio, Nueva Ecija; a 50-hectare land and a 15-hectare property in Malaybalay City, Bukidnon; and a 35-hectare property in Carmen South Cotabato, Bukidnon. Each facility has a capacity for 150 heads.

‘Low-hanging fruit’

The DA had vowed to support local milk production, noting the industry was “a low-hanging fruit” ready for the taking while also increasing the farm sector’s contribution to the economy.

“If we increase the number of cattle in the milking-line, then we can increase production. Immediate effects will be felt,” Agriculture Secretary Francisco Tiu Laurel Jr. said in February.

“Developments in this sector will not only benefit our farmers but also help address malnutrition in the provinces,” he added.

The NDA aims to increase the country’s milk sufficiency by 5 percent, targeting 80 million liters produced by 2028.

The Philippines produced just 29.1 million liters of milk in 2023, down by almost 4 percent a year prior, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority.

The country imports 99 percent of its dairy requirements, mostly from the US and New Zealand. INQ

The price for the butter so essential to the pastries has shot up in recent months, by 25% since September alone, Delmontel says.

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