Tuesday, June 23, 2026

HOW IS FOOD SECURITY DEFINED? HOW IS IT MEASURED?

HOW IS FOOD SECURITY DEFINED? HOW IS IT MEASURED?

When we talk about food security, we must first understand what it truly means: “all people, at all times, have physical, social, and economic access to sufficient, safe, and nutritious food that meets their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life.” That is not my paraphrase, but the definition adopted by the 1996 World Food Summit — and it remains the gold standard today.

Food security is not a simple concept. It rests on four pillars:

  1. Availability: Is there enough food produced or imported?

  2. Access: Can people afford and physically reach that food?

  3. Utilization: Can they absorb its nutrients — which depends on health, sanitation, and food quality?

  4. Stability: Are the first three dimensions reliable over time, or do shocks — like natural disasters or price spikes — disrupt them?


Measuring Food Security: A Scientific Approach

Globally, organizations use a battery of indicators to monitor food security:

  • The Global Food Security Index (GFSI) ranks countries on affordability, availability, quality and safety, and resilience.

  • The Food Insecurity Experience Scale (FIES), developed by the FAO, captures individuals’ lived experiences — whether they’ve worried about food, skipped meals, or gone without preferred foods.

  • Nutrition is measured through anthropometric indicators like stunting, wasting, underweight in children, and micronutrient deficiencies.

At the household level, tools like the Household Food Insecurity Access Scale (HFIAS), Dietary Diversity Scores (DDS), and Coping Strategies Index (CSI) help analyze how families respond when food is scarce.


The Philippine Reality: Is It Enough to Count Rice?

In the Philippines, the picture is more complicated — and somewhat troubling. While the official definition of food security emphasizes nutrition, the national conversation often reduces security to how much rice we stockpile. Why is it that “months of rice inventory” frequently dominates headlines?

To me, that seems like a very narrow measurement for something as complex and human as food security.

In reality, the Philippines does measure more than rice stockpiles:

  • The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) uses food security indicators that include availability, access, and utilization.

  • The Food Insecurity Experience Scale (FIES) is implemented locally to gauge how many Filipinos face moderate or severe food insecurity.

  • The World Food Programme (WFP) runs mobile Vulnerability Analysis and Mapping (mVAM) via phone surveys across the country. Their October 2022 report found that about 1 in 10 households were food insecure. 


  • For dietary quality, the Dietary Diversity Score and child malnutrition rates (stunting, wasting) remain central to our national assessments.

Yet despite these tools, many Filipinos end up surviving on unhealthy, unbalanced diets: instant noodles loaded with sodium, plain rice sprinkled with salt, or — shockingly — even recycled food waste (“pag-pag”). These are not just calorie concerns. They are nutrition concerns.


The Big Question: Why Isn’t Nutrition Center Stage?

If our food security definition requires nutritious food, shouldn’t nutritious food be at the center of how we measure it?

I cannot help but ask: Is our national measurement aligned with this global definition — or are we simplifying food security into mere food quantity?

If we truly want to meet that global standard, perhaps we need a more scientific and holistic approach, not just counting rice.


Suggestions & Reflections

  • The government should prioritize dietary diversity and nutrition metrics more visibly in its food security reporting, not just rice stocks.

  • Local governments (LGUs) can adopt FIES, mVAM, or dietary diversity tools in barangay-level assessments.

  • We need public education on more nutritious food alternatives — and policies that make healthy diets affordable, especially for low-income households.

  • Investment in infrastructure, cold chains, and local production (vegetables, legumes, fish) must be accelerated — so people can access varied, healthy foods.


In short: food security is not just about “do we have enough food?” It is about “do we have good food, all the time, for everyone?” Until we measure it that way — not just by how much rice sits in our warehouses — we risk giving ourselves a false sense of security.

Let’s measure what matters.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/ 06-24-2026


Monday, June 22, 2026

WHAT ARE AGRI-BUSINESS INCUBATORS?

 WHAT ARE AGRI-BUSINESS INCUBATORS?

If the Philippines is ever going to take agriculture seriously—not just as a livelihood, but as a true engine of economic growth—then we need more than tractors, fertilizers, and farm-to-market roads. We need agri-business incubators. And we need many of them—ideally one in every LGU.

So what are agri-business incubators? Think of them as the agricultural counterpart of Technology Business Incubators (TBIs). The concept is the same: identify a promising idea, guide the entrepreneur, provide tools and facilities, and help the product reach the market. But agri-business incubators focus on farming, fisheries, food production, food processing, packaging, and other value-adding industries that rural communities urgently need.

At their core, these incubators help startups, cooperatives, and even smallholder farmers develop sustainable, tech-enabled agricultural enterprises. They provide mentorship, technical support, business planning, access to R&D, and—most crucially—market linkages. Because what use is a good product if the market cannot find it?

The government already has several programs in place. The DA-BAR runs the Agri-Fisheries Technology Business Incubation (TBI) Program, which strengthens R4D institutions and supports agri-fishery entrepreneurs. The process is structured: pre-incubation (feasibility), incubation (product development), and post-incubation (scaling). In other words, the entire growth cycle—from idea to market—is covered.

Then there are the Agri-Based Technology Business Incubators/Innovation Centers (ATBI/ICs), such as the one in Benguet State University. These facilities connect farmers with product development labs, business coaching, and even investors. Meanwhile, DOST-PCAARRD supports more than 25 agri-aqua incubators across the country, many anchored in state universities. Their programs help commercialize research outputs—something we rarely do well in this country.

But here’s the question I always ask: Why don’t we have more? Why not institutionalize one per city or municipality? Why not make incubators part of the local economy, not just a project of national agencies or universities?

Imagine this:
• Every LGU has a dedicated TBI for food processing, packaging, and product development.
• Farm schools hosting mini-incubators for young agri-entrepreneurs.
• Cooperatives running shared processing hubs for indigenous crops.
• Students creating climate-smart solutions that can be commercialized within their hometowns.

We often talk about food sufficiency, rural development, and the need to stop urban migration. But unless we build local businesses—real, sustainable enterprises—people will continue to leave the countryside. Agri-business incubators make agriculture profitable, modern, and attractive to the youth.

And let me emphasize one thing: every incubator must be strong in two areas—product development and market development. Too many Filipino products die in the prototype stage because no one helps entrepreneurs understand branding, testing, packaging requirements, logistics, export standards, and consumer behavior. If we want our local products to reach global markets, these incubators have to guide entrepreneurs through regulatory compliance, export documentation, and global quality standards.

Will this require funding? Yes. But the returns—in jobs, innovation, rural income, and national food security—are far greater. Countries like Israel, Taiwan, and Thailand have already proven that agriculture plus innovation equals prosperity.

So here is my suggestion: Let the national agencies—DA, DOST, DTI, PCAARRD—set the standards, but let the LGUs run the incubators. Local officials understand their crops, their farmers, and their markets better than anyone. With the right partners from universities like UP Los Baños or DLSU, and support from private investors, each LGU can become its own innovation center.

If we want to build a strong agricultural economy, then we must build strong agri-business incubators. The blueprint exists. The technology exists. The expertise exists.

What we need now is the political will to scale it up.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/06-23-2026


Sunday, June 21, 2026

WHAT IS A BUS TRAIN?

 WHAT IS A BUS TRAIN?

Every now and then, a transport idea comes along that is both simple and transformative. The “bus carousel” lane is one of them. But if we are open to exploring even more options, there is another concept worth considering—one that has already been tested globally, yet strangely not in the Philippines. It’s called the bus train.

A bus train is essentially an ultra-long, high-capacity articulated bus—think of it as a train made of bus sections, connected by flexible joints. It often measures more than 22 meters in length and can carry over 150 passengers in a single trip. In contrast, a standard bus is around 12 meters and carries far fewer people. The best part? A bus train runs on regular roads. No rail lines. No overhead power cables. No massive infrastructure cost.

While dedicated lanes are ideal—like those used in Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) systems in Curitiba, Brazil and Bogotá, Colombia—bus trains do not strictly require special lanes. They can operate on existing highways or long straight avenues, especially where curved lanes are minimal. They function like rail cars but without the rails.

This is why I believe bus trains deserve a serious look from our policymakers. If we can deploy jeepneys and regular buses on our cramped urban corridors, why not test a vehicle designed precisely for high-density transport but without the price tag of a full rail system?

Another advantage: bus trains can be configured for both passengers and cargo—a major plus in cities where logistics and commuter demand constantly overlap. In fact, some variants can be pulled by a truck-like tractor unit, similar to how trailer trucks pull long cargo bodies. That raises an interesting possibility: could local manufacturers simply adapt existing truck platforms to pull articulated passenger bodies? If so, we might achieve a mass-transport breakthrough that is 100% locally designed and locally built.

Power options are flexible. Bus trains can run on internal combustion engines, electric motors, or even hybrid systems. Given our abundant sunlight, a solar-assisted bus train—developed with schools like DLSU and UP Diliman, both of which have experience building solar vehicles—may not be far-fetched. Imagine a vehicle that moves like a train, consumes less fuel, emits less pollution, and relies partly on the sun.

Which government agencies should study this? My short list:
DOTr, for route planning and regulatory approval.
DOST, for research and engineering support.
DOE, for energy strategy (especially if electric or solar).
DTI, for local manufacturing, MSME participation, and industrial policy.

But it should not end there. LGUs could operate the schedules, while private companies or cooperatives own the vehicles. This mirrors successful models abroad, such as in China and Europe, where bus trains move thousands daily at a fraction of rail-system costs.

Why not pilot this idea in Metro Manila, Cebu, Iloilo, or Davao? It does not require billions in elevated tracks or underground tunnels. It requires political will—nothing more. A pilot program could be up and running in months, not years.

Some transportation experts believe that if we deploy enough bus trains, we may no longer need conventional railways for certain routes. That may be a bold statement, but consider this: a bi-articulated bus in Bogotá moves as many people per hour as a light rail line—at a tiny fraction of the cost.

So, the question remains: why are we not trying this? Is it too unconventional? Too new? Or perhaps too simple for a system that loves complicated solutions?

As we look for ways to solve congestion, maybe it’s time to think like Curitiba or Bogotá. Maybe it’s time to ask: if a train can run without rails, why not in the Philippines?

If you know an LGU or cooperative willing to pilot a bus-train system, let me know. It might be the transport experiment we have been waiting for.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/06-22-2026

Saturday, June 20, 2026

LET’S BUILD WATER IMPOUNDING PONDS FOR FLOOD CONTROL, IRRIGATION AND AQUACULTURE

 LET’S BUILD WATER IMPOUNDING PONDS FOR FLOOD CONTROL, IRRIGATION AND AQUACULTURE

Imagine if every barangay had a modest pond that performs three vital jobs at once: catching excess rain during typhoons, storing water for crops in the dry season, and raising fish for food and livelihood. With proper filtration, that same pond could even supply potable water. With the right design, vegetables could be grown around the perimeter—or even on floating rafts. If this “three-in-one” solution is so obvious, why are we not doing it?

A “small water-impounding system” is simply an earth-filled structure built across a narrow depression to harvest rainfall and runoff. In short: we don’t need mega-dams; we need smart, community-scale ponds. Fed by rainwater collection and natural runoff, these ponds can catch sudden surges of water (flood control), store it (irrigation), and support fish (aquaculture). Install basic filtration—sand and gravel filters, UV treatment—and the water becomes potable.

Around the pond, we can plant leafy greens, fruit trees, bamboo, or use floating gardens. Add ducks, and you add a natural loop of pest control, fertilizer, and an extra livelihood source. Integrated aquaculture systems around the world already combine fish, vegetables, and ducks under one productive cycle.

So why isn’t the Philippines doing this widely? Institutional fragmentation, lack of a binding national mandate, limited technical capacity at the barangay level, land-use constraints, and the usual bureaucratic silos. Interestingly, there is a proposed national measure: House Bill No. 8833, filed by Rep. Teodorico “Nonong” Haresco Jr. It would require all cities and municipalities to build water-impounding facilities for flood control, potable water, and irrigation. A good step—but still a proposal.

Existing laws already make this possible. Presidential Decree 1067 (the Water Code) affirms state responsibility over water resources. The Local Government Code (RA 7160) empowers LGUs to build infrastructure for public welfare, which can include water-impounding ponds. The legal basis is there; what’s missing is coordination, urgency, and a unified push.

Which agencies should work together? Many:
DILG, to guide and mobilize LGUs.
DENR, for environmental clearances and watershed protection.
NIA, for irrigation and engineering support.
DOST, for filtration and monitoring technologies.
BFAR, for aquaculture planning.
DPWH, for structural and spillway design.
DA, for crop integration and food-security programs.
NWRB, for water rights and regulation.
CCC and NDRRMC, for climate adaptation and disaster-risk reduction.

Could cooperatives be empowered through the CDA? Absolutely. Cooperatives could manage and maintain these ponds, run aquaculture operations, produce vegetables, and distribute both water and food. This is community-based resilience in its purest form.

Do we have real examples? Yes. The Philippines already has the Small Water Impounding System (SWIS) standard, and the Bureau of Soils and Water Management has long implemented the Small Water Impounding Project (SWIP). Even the Candaba Swamp in Pampanga—though a natural wetland—demonstrates how seasonal water retention can double as agricultural land in the dry months. We are not starting from zero.

My view is simple: this is a low-hanging solution with high-impact results. Flood control, irrigation, aquaculture, potable water, vegetables, ducks—one pond, many benefits. It aligns perfectly with climate resilience, food security, and rural livelihood development.

My suggestions:

  1. Pilot 2–3 barangays in flood-prone or water-scarce areas.

  2. Form a multi-agency steering group with LGUs and cooperatives.

  3. Develop a design manual: sizing, runoff calculations, filtration units, aquaculture species, vegetable and duck integration.

  4. Set clear monitoring metrics: water level, quality, productivity, maintenance, community use.

  5. Scale up through HB 8833 or LGU ordinances and proper budgeting.

Why isn’t this already widespread? Cost? Capacity? Land tenure? Or simply lack of imagination? Whatever the reason, we cannot afford to waste water—or opportunities—any longer. Water is not just a threat during floods; it is an asset when stored, managed, and shared.

The tools exist. The urgency is real. Let’s build these ponds.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/06-21-2026


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