Bacolod, SRA agree to sell refined sugar at P70/kilo

Posted by watchmen
April 3, 2023
Posted in TOP STORIES
Personnel of Bacolod City Cooperative and Livelihood Development Office sold Kadiwa sugar at P70 per kilo during the launching of the program at the Government Center yesterday, April 3, 2023. The city government has partnered with the Sugar Regulatory Administration to initiate the selling of cheaper refined sugar for households in Bacolod. (Bacolod City PIO photo)
Personnel of Bacolod City Cooperative and Livelihood Development Office sold Kadiwa sugar at P70 per kilo during the launching of the program at the Government Center yesterday, April 3, 2023. The city government has partnered with the Sugar Regulatory Administration to initiate the selling of cheaper refined sugar for households in Bacolod. (Bacolod City PIO photo)

The Bacolod City government partnered with the Sugar Regulatory Administration (SRA) in selling refined sugar at a cheaper price of P70 per kilo for household consumers starting yesterday.

Mayor Alfredo Benitez, who led the launching of the initiative before the city employees at the Government Center, said there is a need to address high inflation, which is caused mainly by price increases in food commodities. That is why the government must temper food prices.

“The intervention of the national government is to ensure that we have cheap food products. It starts with sugar because the sugar mills are just nearby. Eventually, it will include rice and other food products,” he said.

Brenda Burdeos, head of the City Cooperative and Livelihood Development Office (CCLDO), said the SRA initially provided 500 kilos of sugar for the launching, which were sold out within an hour.

“These are intended for households. Only two kilos per household is allowed,” she said.

The sugar was supplied by a sugar milling company in the province, which is among the sugar mills that offered sugar to be sold by the government at P70 per kilo.

Currently, refined sugar is sold at around P112 per kilo in supermarkets in the city.

Burdeos said the CCLDO is coordinating with the vendors’ groups to serve as the city’s partners in selling Kadiwa sugar in designated areas in the three major public markets.

In February this year, Benitez wrote a letter to SRA acting administrator Dave John Thaddeus Alba, expressing the intent of the city government to participate in the program that ensures the availability of affordable sugar to household consumers and Kadiwa outlets.

He said the CCLDO intends to avail 1,000 kilos of sugar every week on a consignment basis.

“We will increase volume as needed,” he said. (PNA)

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