Wanted: Roadmap for WV economic recovery

These farmers of Barangay Tigum in Pavia, Iloilo are happy to harvest fresh tomatoes. They hope to sell these at a handsome price. Farming has been challenging in recent months due to the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, they say. IAN PAUL CORDERO/PN

ILOILO City – Amid the expected slowdown of the economy due to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, the Western Visayas Regional Development Council has been urged to craft a roadmap aimed at sustaining the region’s growth and development.

“The formulation and implementation of this roadmap is very timely and critical. This roadmap will provide us a clear direction of where we are today and where we are headed. No province should be left behind. We will move forward as one region,” said Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon.

He called for greater collaboration between the government and private sector to keep up with the challenges.

The National Economic Development Authority (NEDA) in Region 6 was urged to make consultations with the Regional Development Council, the academe, business community, and various stakeholders.

“We need to collaborate and harmonize our goals and plans as one region. Now more than ever, we need to work together in order for our economies to grow and preserve the gains that we have achieved in the past,” said Drilon.

The private sector should actively get involved with crafting the roadmap and monitoring its compliance, he added.

Region 6 is the fifth largest economy in the Philippines outside the National Capital Region (NCR) in 2018.

The region registered a gross domestic product of 9.4 percent in 2015, 8.4 percent in 2016, 8.6 percent in 2017, but it slowed down in 2018 at 6.1 percent.

“The roadmap will outline the emerging opportunities for the region which boasts accessibility and inter-connectivity as its major assets,” said Drilon.

With the development of the Port of Iloilo by the International Container Terminal Services, Inc. (ICTSI), the region’s conectivity would further improve.

The ICTSI will push through with its plan to infuse P8.7 billion to expand the Port of Iloilo, according to Drilon.

The ICTSI is still waiting for the green light from the government.

“This project will further enhance regional connectivity and facilitate faster trade between and among provinces. Agricultural products and fisheries production in the region can enter big domestic and foreign markets in refrigerated containers, which will make our products very competitive,” Drilon said.

In 2018, Western Visayas recorded the total volume of palay production at 2,232,293 metric tons and fisheries production at 379,471.91 metric tons. 

The project will bring the Iloilo Port to world class levels by maximizing big ship capability; installing ship-to-shore gantry cranes; and continuously upgrading yard capacity aligned to traffic studies.  

The project also includes the building of a terminal for cruise ship passengers to meet the objectives of the National Tourism Development Plan. 

The ICTSI’s plan is very timely given that Iloilo is poised to become a major exporter of agricultural products once the Jalaur River Multi-purpose Project is completed in 2022. The project will irrigate 31,000 hectares of rice land, doubling the rice production of Iloilo and the region in general.

Job opportunities await the residents of Region 6 once ongoing investments in the region have been fully materialized, said Drilon.

He cited as an example the new facility of San Miguel Brewery Inc. (SMB), the country’s leading beer producer, in Iloilo.

Drilon said Ramon Ang of SMC assured him recently they look forward to completing its new production facility in Iloilo.

“Once completed, it will bring more jobs to all provinces in Western Visayas,” he said./PN

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