
BUTUAN CITY (April 28) — With dry months looming, Caraga’s agriculture sector is bracing early—pinpointing which farms are most likely to be hit and moving resources before crops begin to fail.
The Department of Agriculture in the region (DA-13) has started mapping vulnerable rice and corn areas, focusing on rainfed communities where farmers depend heavily on unpredictable rainfall.
Majority of farms at risk
According to DA-13 disaster risk reduction focal person Gerlie Antipaso, about 57% of rice farms in Caraga rely on rainfed systems—making them highly exposed to prolonged dry spells linked to El Niño.
Initial data show the scale of vulnerability:
- 17,228 hectares of rainfed rice farms
- 1,897 hectares in upland rice areas
- 1,109 hectares of corn farms in rain-dependent and river-adjacent zones
Farmers at the tail end of irrigation systems are also flagged as high-risk due to limited water access during drought conditions.
“We are identifying which barangays will need support first,” Antipaso said, emphasizing the need to act before water shortages intensify.
Seeds, water, and timing
To cushion the impact, DA-13 is building up buffer stocks and pre-positioning inputs. Currently available for distribution are:
- 1,720 bags of certified rice seeds
- 1,950 bags of hybrid rice seeds

