Taiwan starts training OFWs, Pinoy students on modern organic farming
Taiwan has started training Filipino workers and students on organic farming amid the efforts of the Philippine government to boost local agricultural production in the country.
MECO chairman Silvestre H. Bello III said the training is free and covers modern organic farming that can be used by both overseas Filipino workers and students once they return to the country to serve as alternative livelihood that has the potential for agri-business.
“We have introduced a program to equip our OFWs, as well as our Filipino immigrants and students in Taiwan, with skills in modern organic farming so that they may use them when they return to the Philippines,” Bello said.
“In this manner, perhaps slowly, we hope to contribute to increasing our domestic food production and improve the lives of our OFWs, immigrants and students once they are back in the country,” he added.
Bello said the first batch of trainees, which include 15 OFWs and nine Filipino immigrants and students, underwent a two-day experiential training in a farm in Kaohsiung City.
The training provided immersive and hands-on experience in agri-technologies, agri-education and agri-entrepreneurship.
The training program is a joint undertaking of the MECO Kaohsiung Extension Office and the Migrant Workers Office in partnership with Kaohsiung-based AgriGaia Social Enterprise International Ltd.