Monday, 05 January 2026, 9:45 am

    DA bets on more sili to cool price spikes 

    Agriculture Secretary Francisco P. Tiu Laurel Jr. is zeroing in on one of the most volatile items in the Filipino kitchen: chilli pepper or sili. With prices swinging sharply during the rainy season, the Department of Agriculture (DA) is pushing a plan to ramp up production, harden farms against extreme weather, and bring more predictability to supply and prices. 

    Chili pepper prices routinely jump when heavy rains and typhoons damage crops, disrupting supply just as demand holds firm. In September, a kilo of the local siling labuyo sold for as high as P800 due to weather disturbances. 

     Tiu Laurel wants to change that cycle recent meeting with DA officials, the agriculture secretary pressed officials to establish baseline numbers—national and Metro Manila consumption, current output, and average yield per hectare. 

    “We need to know how much we consume, how much we produce, and where the gaps are,” said Tiu Laurel. 

    Those figures will guide how many hectares should be planted and how fast production can scale. One early conclusion: chili peppers are not a regional niche crop. Officials stressed that they can be grown in most parts of the country, not just in Bicol, widening the pool of potential growers under the DA’s High Value Crops (HVC) program. 

     For 2026, chili is being lined up as a priority crop alongside munggo, or mung beans, with different goals—lower prices for chili, reduced imports for mung beans. Weather remains the biggest risk. “Prices go up because crops are damaged by rain,” Tiu Laurel noted, pointing to the need for protected cultivation in strategically assigned locations. 

     The DA is now backing greenhouses using local materials as well as typhoon-resistant structures that can withstand strong storms to shield plants from floods and prolonged rainfall, a move that could stabilize supply even during typhoon season. Moreover, access to clean planting materials such as siling labuyo, siling pansigang, and grafted bell peppers will go full-swing through the DA’s Gulayan sa Bayan, a move to strengthen agri-entrepreneurship in 1,370 municipalities to address food inflation with commercial high-value crops farming and primary processing. 

     The push comes as the department tracks price movements across other vegetables. Bell pepper prices have hovered around P250 per kilo, while munggo prices have swung widely, highlighting how sensitive food markets are to supply shocks and import dependence. From a business standpoint, the strategy could ripple across the value chain. 

    Tiu Laurel noted that a more stable chili pepper output means fewer price spikes for restaurants, food processors, and retailers—especially during peak demand periods such as the holidays. The DA chief has ordered weekly public updates on prices and supply starting January, using articles and short-form videos, to reinforce transparency. Typhoons may still cause disruptions, but the goal is to make them the exception—not the rule.  

    Tiu Laurel is convinced that growing more chili—sometimes called “red gold” when its prices soar—protect it from the weather, and engage in year-round production will take the heat out of the market. 

    Related Stories

    spot_img

    Latest Stories