Sunday, July 03, 2022

With so much land, why are we facing food crisis, asks Sarawak premier



With so much land, why are we facing food crisis, asks Sarawak premier


Abang Johari Openg said the agricultural sector can develop further only if it adopts the latest technologies, such as the Internet-of-Things.


KUALA LUMPUR: Sarawak premier Abang Johari Openg finds it perplexing that a country like Malaysia, which has vast tracts of land, is facing a shortage of food supplies.

He said while the present crisis could be attributed to geopolitical conflicts like the Ukraine-Russia war, such events should never impact Malaysia which has been blessed with an abundance of land to be developed for agricultural purposes.


“Once you become a food producer, you no longer have to depend on imported food supplies. That way, we won’t be affected by the rising prices of food caused by global conflicts,” he told reporters after officiating the Sarawak Agrofest 2022 here today.

However, Abang Johari said the nation’s agricultural sector can develop further only if it adopts the latest technologies, such as the Internet-of-Things (IoT).

“We can’t use the conventional approach in agriculture any more. If people continue seeing farmers as poor folks who work the land using hoes, it will not help attract people to join the sector.

“If we look at other countries like Thailand, China and Taiwan, they are utilising the latest technologies. We need to do the same as well.”

He also said exports would strengthen the ringgit, which would also stop rising food prices.

Abang Johari said Sarawak is committed to becoming a net exporter of high-quality agricultural products to fulfil the needs of both domestic and international markets by 2030.


In order to achieve that target, he said Sarawak was limiting the usage of land for planting oil palm trees and switching to the food industry.

*********

kt comments:

The 2 worst culprits have been Perak and Pahang, where farmland worked on by Chinese farmers, some for more than 40 over years, were deliberately destroyed an/or seized by authorities for other uses or even gifts to favoured state footballers.

We have seen video clips of state bouncers going around farms slashing at cabbage heads, wantonly destroying scarce food resources, whilst a state boasted it had destroyed/chopped down 15,000 durian trees.



No comments:

Post a Comment