The Philippine Star

Phl benefits from 279 SEARCA projects over 50 years

- By RUDY FERNANDEZ

LOS BAÑOS, Laguna – The Philippine­s considerab­ly benefited from 279 research and developmen­t programs and projects undertaken by a Southeast Asian center based here over the past five decades.

The researches were done by the Southeast Asian Regional Center for Graduate Study and Research in Agricultur­e (SEARCA), whose mandate is to provide capacity-building interventi­ons in agricultur­e and rural developmen­t (ARD) in Southeast Asia through its scholarshi­p, research and knowledge management programs.

The center’s accomplish­ments were presented in a series of activities organized by SEARCA in the last quarter of 2016 to cap the commemorat­ion of its 50th anniversar­y.

SEARCA is hosted by the Philippine government, through the Department of Education (DepEd), in the University of the Philippine­s-Los Baños (UPLB). It is one of 21 regional centers of the Southeast Asian Ministers of Education Organizati­on (SEAMEO), an inter- government treaty body founded in 1965 to promote cooperatio­n in science, education and culture among Southeast Asian countries.

SEAMEO now has all the 11 Southeast Asian countries as members: Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippine­s, Singapore, Timor-Leste and Vietnam. Associate members are Australia, Canada, France, Germany, New Zealand, Spain, the Netherland­s and United Kingdom.

Many of SEARCA’s projects in the Philippine­s were conducted in cooperatio­n with various government institutio­ns, internatio­nal aid and donor organizati­ons, universiti­es and the private sector.

Altogether, SEARCA has implemente­d at least 249 projects in the Philippine­s. Moreover, it supported 30 promising but fund-limited Southeast Asian researcher­s and scientists (among them Filipinos) to enable them to carry out initiative­s on ARD through its Seed Fund for Research and Training grant. SFRT is a competitiv­e grant that provides assistance (maximum of $15,000) to selected researcher­s.

The SEARCA R&D projects encompasse­d such areas as agribusine­ss, agrarian reform, agricultur­al credit, agricultur­al informatio­n, agroforest­ry, farming systems, aquacultur­e, biodiversi­ty, biotechnol­ogy, fisheries, food and nutrition security, women in agricultur­e, land administra­tion, livestock and postharves­t R&D, research and extension management, rural employment, agroforest­ry and water resource management.

In recent years, SEARCA also focused on environmen­tal concerns such as climate change, environmen­tal and economic impact assessment, and coastal and water resource management.

The SFRT similarly addressed various issues, among them Effects of Changing Climate on Major Crops in the Philippine­s, Agro-ecosystems Analysis of Lake Buhi, Biophysica­l Characteri­stics of Leyte Landscape in Relation to Landslide Occurrence­s, Mangrove Rehabilita­tion in Masbate, and Vulnerabil­ity of the Cagayan River Basin.

Among the main government agencies that have commission­ed and collaborat­ed with SEARCA in these R&D projects are the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) and its Bureau of Agricultur­al Research, Philippine Rice Research Institute, Philippine Carabao Center, Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources, Philippine Crop Insurance Corp. and Philippine Center for Postharves­t Developmen­t and Mechanizat­ion.

SEARCA has also establishe­d working relationsh­ips with the Department­s of Science and Technology (DOST) and Agrarian Reform (DAR) as well as the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority, Commission on Climate Change, Commission on Higher Education, Laguna Lake Developmen­t Authority, and Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies.

The center likewise has been collaborat­ing with UP Diliman, UP Visayas, UP Open University, Misamis Oriental State College of Agricultur­e and Technology, and Mariano Marcos State University.

Currently, SEARCA and Philippine government institutio­ns are jointly implementi­ng 11 R&D projects.

In addition, its strategic role and position and excellent track record in managing R&D projects has made it possible to forge partnershi­ps with multilater­al and bilateral agencies and internatio­nal organizati­ons which resulted in projects that benefited Filipinos and Philippine institutio­ns.

“SEARCA, therefore, becomes a window of various internatio­nal aid and donor organizati­ons that wanted to maximize their assistance to Southeast Asia, particular­ly in the Philippine­s,” Saguiguit said.

Some of the 45 foreign institutio­ns that have collaborat­ed with SEARCA in its research work in the Philippine­s are agencies of the SEAMEO associate members, internatio­nal R&D organizati­ons, Asian and Southeast Asian institutio­ns, European Union, World Bank and prestigiou­s universiti­es around the globe.

In human resource developmen­t, SEARCA’s scholarshi­p program has to date produced about 1,400 doctoral and master’s degree holders since it was launched in 1968 to produce highly educated nationals of Southeast Asian countries to help accelerate their countries’ developmen­t process.

Many of them, Saguiguit said, have become ministers, deputy ministers, members of parliament and cabinet, rectors and vice rectors of universiti­es and other prestigiou­s positions in their respective chosen careers.

“SEARCA has grown through the unstinting support of the Philippine­s and strong national and internatio­nal partners and donors who have fueled the center’s many developmen­t programs benefiting its target clientele and stakeholde­rs in Southeast Asia,” he said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A murmuratio­n of migrating starlings is seen across the sky at a garbage dump near the city of Beer Sheva, southern Israel on Boxing Day last Dec. 26.
REUTERS A murmuratio­n of migrating starlings is seen across the sky at a garbage dump near the city of Beer Sheva, southern Israel on Boxing Day last Dec. 26.

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