ALMIRA LOUISE S. MARTINEZ

J.H.B. ZAPATA Integrated Farm, a hydroponic farm in Pampanga province north of the Philippines, wants young Filipinos to venture into soilless farming, using nutrient-rich water instead, as the country grapples with food security amid its dwindling farmers.

鈥淵ou can do farming under the shade because you just need to place the plant on the pump,鈥 farm owner John Harold B. Zapata, 24, told 大象传媒 in an interview. 鈥淪ince it鈥檚 a soilless cultivation, you won鈥檛 touch soil and worms.鈥

Starting a hydroponic farm also requires minimal capital, he said.

Mr. Zapata started building his DIY (do-it-yourself) greenhouse in 2021 with less than a thousand pesos in capital and recyclable materials from the junk shop such as scraps of wood, bamboo and plastic sheets.

Before that, he armed himself with knowledge about hydroponic farming by joining Facebook groups and online forums on the subject. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know anything about farming. I just knew I wanted to try,鈥 he said.

The average age of Filipino rice farmers is 56 and climbing, and analysts predict a critical shortage of farmers in the next decade as young people show less interest in agriculture, threatening food security.

The problem is compounded by increasing farm input costs. Fertilizers, pesticides, machinery and irrigation systems are becoming more expensive, eating away at farmers鈥 modest profits.

The agriculture and forestry sectors had the most year-on-year employment decline in February, with 950,000 workers lost mainly due to typhoons that devastated farmlands, according to the local statistics agency.

Hydroponics is the farming technique of growing plants using a water-based nutrient solution instead of soil. It uses 90% less water than traditional farming and occupies minimal space.

After four years, Mr. Zapata鈥檚 greenhouse grew to a 1,700-square-meter farm, housing more than 2,000 heads of lettuce, basil, and arugula.

鈥淧eople do not ask where the lettuce came from,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey do not ask if it came from an expensive greenhouse. What matters is that the produce is good.鈥

Mr. Zapata offers workshops and training for beginners interested in starting a hydroponic farm. Each session costs P2,000, which includes starter seeds and a marketing guide.

He has taught more than a hundred students since February and aims to reach a thousand by year-end.

鈥淲e just wanted to produce vegetables before,鈥 he said. 鈥淣ow, I want to produce not just vegetables but also a new generation of growers.鈥 鈥 Almira Louise S. Martinez

Mr. Zapata is one of the 鈥渃hangemakers鈥 of the Movers of Tomorrow, a storytelling platform launched by MPT Mobility, the innovations arm of Metro Pacific Tollways Corp. (MPTC).

MPTC is the tollways unit of Metro Pacific Investments Corp., one of three key Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT, Inc.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in 大象传媒 through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls.