Philippine rice output risks 30% collapse as ‘super’ El Nino strengthens
Rice output could be slashed by 700,000 tonnes as dams dry up, evoking memories of the Philippine drought of 1997-98

In the fields of central Luzon, farmers who planted their rice in June are watching the sky with worry.
Out over the Pacific, a familiar spectre is gathering strength – and with it, the threat of empty granaries and hungry households.
“We don’t see anything visible, it’s all talk,” said Raul Montemayor, national manager of the Federation of Free Farmers, an NGO representing 250,000 of the country’s 10 million rural workers and agricultural labourers.

Speaking at Pagasa’s 197th Climate Outlook Forum, held online that same day, Dr Ana Liza Solis, chief of the bureau’s climate monitoring and prediction section, put the odds of El Nino intensifying from October at 62 per cent.