IS IT A GOOD IDEA TO BUILD PROVINCIAL FOOD TERMINALS?
IS IT A GOOD IDEA TO BUILD PROVINCIAL FOOD TERMINALS?
For a country that loves to talk about food security, it surprises many people when they learn that we do not have a single true provincial food terminal anywhere in the Philippines. Nueva Vizcaya has an agro-logistics hub, yes—but it serves an entire region, not one province. And while the old Food Terminal Inc. (FTI) in Taguig once held promise, it eventually slowed down, became tangled in politics, and lost the operational momentum it once had.
Ironically, despite that slowdown, FTI continues to draft huge expansion plans—₱3 billion worth of mega food hubs in Bukidnon, Quezon, and either Cebu or Iloilo, on top of the ₱3.6-billion Bagsakan ng Bayan hub in Clark. Ambitious, yes. Necessary, definitely. But if it takes the national government decades to build just a handful of large terminals, then perhaps it’s time to ask a practical question: Should food terminals really be government-run in the first place?
I raise that question because years ago, while I was assigned to the Philippine Consulate General in New York, I visited the Hunts Point Terminal Market, the largest wholesale produce facility in the world. I expected some monolithic government bureaucracy. Instead, what I found was a privately operated cooperative—a well-run, efficient, market-driven facility sitting on land owned by the City of New York. The buildings are owned by the merchants’ cooperative; the land is public. A hybrid model. Clean, organized, and profitable.
Why can’t we adopt that model here?
Local governments can provide the land—and even the buildings—but let cooperatives operate the terminals. It avoids bloated bureaucracy, encourages efficiency, and gives ownership to the very people who depend on the system. There may not be a national law that automatically grants cooperatives “first option,” but under the Cooperative Code (RA 9520) and the Local Government Code, LGUs can prioritize them. Some already do.
Why Provincial Food Terminals Make Sense
A provincial food terminal isn’t just a big bodega that has an aircon. If done right, it becomes:
1. A lifeline for farmers.
It lets smallholder farmers sell directly to wholesalers and retailers, bypassing layers of middlemen. Higher farmgate prices mean higher production incentives.
2. A shield against spoilage.
With cold storage, sorting, and light processing, post-harvest losses can drop significantly—critical in a tropical country where we lose 20–40% of produce before it even reaches the market.
3. A stabilizer of food prices.
Aggregating produce allows a province to distribute stocks more efficiently, minimizing sudden price spikes.
4. A logistics anchor.
Terminals can link farms to schools, hospitals, groceries, and disaster-response networks—especially vital in typhoon-prone regions.
5. A generator of jobs.
From packaging to transport to retailing, a terminal creates an entire ecosystem of livelihoods.
But There Are Real Challenges
Capital costs are high. Cold storage, warehouses, and digital platforms are not cheap.
Governance risks are real—an underperforming terminal can quickly become a political playground.
Logistics constraints—bad roads, weak ports, intermittent electricity—can cripple operations.
And if terminals don’t integrate with existing markets, they may end up underused, like so many government-built facilities that never reached full capacity.
What Success Should Look Like
A viable provincial food terminal must avoid the trap of overbuilding. Start modular:
cold storage + sorting + digital inventory system. Then scale.
Use a Public-Private-People Partnership model—LGUs, cooperatives, and private logistics firms co-managing operations.
Integrate digital platforms to track prices, monitor supply, and connect farmers directly to buyers. Blockchain is optional, but transparency is non-negotiable.
Location must follow agro-ecological logic, not political convenience. Build where production and transport naturally converge.
Design terminals to double as emergency food hubs during disasters—a real need in an archipelago hammered yearly by storms.
My Take
Yes—building provincial food terminals is not only a good idea; it is an overdue one. But we cannot rely on a purely government-led approach that takes decades and billions only to produce a handful of mega-hubs.
If we want food terminals that actually work, we should consider the Hunts Point model:
public land, cooperative-run operations, private efficiency, community ownership.
Done right, a provincial food terminal could be the game changer farmers have been waiting for—and the backbone of a more secure, more equitable national food system.
RAMON IKE V. SENERES
www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/07-02-2026