HINOBA-AN HOG SECTOR EXPECTS BOOST AFTER SECURING ASF CERTIFICATION

The local pig industry in Hinoba-an, the southernmost municipality in Negros Occidental, is bracing for higher market rates and increased demand following a key biosecurity milestone.

The town recently earned a Recognition of Active Surveillance on African swine fever (RAS-ASF) from the Bureau of Animal Industry, an agency under the Department of Agriculture.

​Mayor Daph Reliquias shared the announcement on social media on Saturday, showcasing the official certificate that praises the town’s dedication to monitoring, curbing, and managing the spread of ASF.

​“We have officially received the RAS. This is what we have been waiting for so that more buyers and shippers will come to Hinoba-an,” he said. “This is also the time when live weight prices of pigs sold in Hinoba-an will increase.”

​Reliquias noted that hog traders regularly travel to Hinoba-an from Cebu, Antique, Capiz, Aklan, Iloilo, and various neighboring districts across the Negros Island Region.

​“We have made sure that buyers from outside Hinoba-an can come here to ensure a steady income for our hog producers, while we also assure them that the meat sold in our town is of quality, safe, and ASF-free,” he added.

​In response to the development, the municipal government and the Municipal Agriculture Office jointly agreed to bump up the local live-weight price of hogs to ₱125 per kilogram, up from ₱110 per kilogram just days prior.

​“If there is a buyer or shipper who buys at ₱130 to ₱150 and above, it would be better to allow our hog raisers to recover,” he added.

​To guarantee equitable trading and precise measurements, the mayor further encouraged local livestock farmers to utilize the town’s “Kilohan nang Bayan” public weighing stations.

​Hinoba-an retains a “yellow” or surveillance status. The municipality secured the declaration on July 15 after the Animal Disease Diagnosis and Reference Laboratory confirmed negative ASF results from diagnostic tests run on July 1 across nine local villages.

​The extensive surveillance initiative encompassed 1,018 farms housing a total population of 15,764 pigs across the barangays of Poblacion I, Poblacion II, San Rafael, Alim, Bacuyangan, Bulwangan, Culipapa, Daug, and Pook.

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