Hot commodity: Indonesia is preparing a campaign to encourage people to plant chillies. The government plans to distribute free seeds to 100,000 households. Tatan SyuflanaBy Anthony Deutsch in Cianjur
January 16 2011 20:44

Indonesian farmer Ujang Majudin pointed to rows of rotting chilli peppers, tomatoes and egg plants as clouds gathered again over his fields, already water-logged by incessant rain. With sharply declining yields and revenue, he faces the toughest season since taking over the family farm 15 years ago. “If the situation doesn’t get better, I have no choice but to lay people off if I am going to survive,” he said. Next month, he will cut a quarter of his 120-strong workforce if the weather doesn’t improve. As much as 80 per cent of his chilli crop failed, he explained, powering a battered pickup truck over a washed-out country road an hour outside the capital, Jakarta. “The rain is killing my vegetables.” Indonesia is in the grip of crop failures brought on by nearly a year of heavy rain, which are threatening millions of jobs and pushing up food prices for tens of millions of impoverished families when global food prices are already on the rise. Inflation in the country rose to a 20-month high of 7 per cent in December, driven mainly by food prices. The cost of rice – Indonesia’s staple foodstuff – has risen by 30 per cent in the past year owing to falls in domestic production, prompting the government to spend heavily in recent months on imports. … Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, Indonesia’s president, and Mari Pangestu, trade minister, have thrown their weight behind a “grow your own vegetables” campaign. Mr Yudhoyono has encouraged “creativity” at home, while the minister has spoken on national television about her 200 chilli plants. … “This is not a food crisis, but a weather crisis,” Bayu Krisnamurthi, deputy agriculture minister, said in an interview. “We are taking it very seriously. We must make sure [food riots] don’t happen here.” … In a teleconference on Saturday, Mr Yudhoyono said climate change would play an important role in the lives of millions of farmers in Indonesia, a vast tropical archipelago with more than 17,000 islands where rising sea levels are already hitting coastal communities. …

Indonesian crop failures add to food fears