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Singapore's agriculture sector is undergoing a significant transformation, with recent dips in local vegetable and seafood production reflecting what experts describe as a necessary transitional phase toward more technologically advanced farming methods.
"While the numbers may seem disappointing at first glance, we're actually seeing important progress beneath the surface," explained Professor William Chen, director of Nanyang Technological University's Food Science and Technology Programme. He emphasized that it would be premature to declare Singapore's ambitious "30 by 30" food security goal—aiming to produce 30% of nutritional needs locally by 2030—as unachievable.
The latest Singapore Food Agency (SFA) report reveals some concerning trends: local vegetable production fell to just 3% of total consumption (down from 3.2% in 2023), while seafood dropped from 7.3% to 6.1%. However, these figures tell only part of the story.
Bright Spots Amid Transition
The report contained several positive indicators for Singapore's food future:
- Egg production surged by 13%, with local farms now meeting nearly 35% of national demand (up from under 32%) through technological improvements
- Vegetable productivity increased from 227.2 tonnes per hectare annually to over 231 tonnes
- Seafood yields grew substantially, rising from under39 tonnes per hectare annuallyto over40 tonnes despite fewer operational farms
"We've been producing eggs since the late '60s," Prof Chen noted. "Now we have just three highly efficient egg farms producing more than ever before through technology adoption."
The Road Ahead for Local Farms
SFA CEO Damian Chan outlined the agency's strategy moving forward: "Our focus isn't on maintaining numerous small farms, but ensuring remaining operations achieve maximum productivity and financial viability." The $60 million Agri-food Cluster Transformation Fund supports this shift by helping farmers adopt automation and advanced agricultural technologies.
"High-productivity farming remains an emerging sector both in Singapore and globally," Chan added. "These transitions take time as business models evolve toward economic sustainability."
'30 by30' Goal Still Within Reach?
The government continues working toward its decade-old target despite current challenges like pandemic disruptionsand global supply chain issues causedby geopolitical tensions.
"The timeline spans years—just like our successful egg industry development did," Prof Chen stressed regardingthe long-term vision behindthe numerical target which he describes primarilyas amotivational benchmark ratherthan rigid performance metricfor evaluation purposes alone ."We must allow sufficient timefor new high-tech farmsto establish themselves properly before judging outcomes prematurely ."< / blockquote >As Singapores agricultural landscape evolves , experts agree that temporaryproduction declines may represent necessary growing pains en route towardsustainable , technologically enhancedlocal food systems capableof meeting future demands amid increasingglobal uncertainty .< / p >
Reportbychingshijie @asiaone .com< / p >
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