Home Headlines Product dev’t ongoing to boost Zambales mango industry

Product dev’t ongoing to boost Zambales mango industry

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SMZ president Enrico Batungbacal (left) confer with mango industry stakeholders and ZMIC-TWG head Engr. Domingo Mariano (right) during a visit at the Batungbacal Farms in Palauig, Zambales. Contributed photo

IBA, Zambales — While tourism stakeholders in Zambales prepare for this year’s iteration of the annual Dinamulag Mango Festival, the provincial government is preoccupied on another level in the task of improving production to sustain the local mango industry.

Gov. Hermogenes Ebdane Jr. said on Monday the provincial government’s flagship program to revitalize the Zambales mango industry is now on its second phase, setting the rehabilitation and rejuvenation of some 20,800 mango trees in the province at a cost of P40 million.

This four-year phase, from 2025 to 2028, comprises the bulk of the P50-million Zambales Mango Green Valley Project launched last year to increase mango production yield, encourage farm owners and contractors to adopt modern farm technologies, and promote good agricultural practices for long-term sustainability and profitability.

A mango tree blooms following flower induction at one of the pilot farms in Zambales. Contributed photo

Ebdane said that after Phase 1, which established modern mango production areas to serve as demo farms for modern mango production technology, Phase 2 now focuses on rehabilitating existing carabao mango trees through improved farm management, fertilization, and irrigation techniques.

A key component in this stage, the governor explained, is capacity-building and training, which shall be undertaken in collaboration with the President Ramon Magsaysay State University (PRMSU) and the Samahan ng Magmamangga ng Zambales (SMZ).

Ebdane stressed that efforts to improve production are crucial to the local industry because, while Zambales is known for producing the tastiest mango fruits in the country, the province produces only 2.3 tons of mangoes per hectare, which is way below the national average of 12 tons per hectare.

“We’re now aiming for 12 tons, too,” the governor pointed out. “This is the more important, and more difficult, part of sustaining the mango industry because we have to exponentially increase quantity without sacrificing quality to make local mangoes more competitive.”

Ebdane stressed that while product promotion has been going on in decades with the annual mango festival, “it was only last year under the Zambales Mango Green Valley Project that serious product development through modern production techniques started under a provincewide program.”

Engr. Domingo Mariano, who heads the technical working group for the Zambales Mango Industry Council (ZMIC), said three pilot areas were established to introduce new production technology to local growers.

Premium Zambales carabao mangoes with varying degrees of ripeness are sold at roadside stalls. Contributed photo

Last December, the provincial government released P6.4 million to the SMZ under a conditional assistance program to set the collaboration project in motion, Mariano said.

SMZ president Enrico Batungbacal said the cash assistance was used for pre-spray clearing, flower induction, chemical application, fruit bagging, irrigation and fertilization, security, and harvesting at the pilot farms.

The provincial government through the provincial agriculture office, along with ZMIC and SMZ, will also initiate Phase 3 of the project next year to propagate scions and seedlings of the Sweet Elena variety from Sta. Cruz, Zambales. This variety was named in 1995 by the Guinness Book of World Records as the world’s sweetest.

Ebdane added that under Phase 3, a mango training center and a post-harvest processing facility are being established under a usufruct agreement with the Region 3 Mango Stakeholders Association, Inc. These facilities, awarded under the Department of Agriculture’s High Value Crops Development Program, will enhance mango farming education, improve post-harvest handling, and elevate production standards in Zambales.

“The Mango Green Valley Project will be a continuing program, and already, we are considering a marketing component that will include branding, product exportation, as well as greenhouse cultivation,” Ebdane said. “We will be constantly refining and updating this program as we go along.”

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