Philippines accelerates cold storage logistics rollout

Philippines accelerates cold storage logistics rollout

The Philippines is accelerating national cold-chain infrastructure for agricultural supply. Modular and mega cold storage warehouses will support food security, agricultural flow, temperature-controlled distribution, and reduced post-harvest losses across strategic production and trade corridors.


IN Brief:

  • The Department of Agriculture is accelerating cold storage and agri-logistics infrastructure across the Philippines.
  • Modular and mega cold storage warehouses will be developed in strategic agricultural zones.
  • Mega facilities are planned with capacities of up to 8,000 pallet positions.

The Philippines Department of Agriculture is accelerating cold storage and agri-logistics infrastructure across the country, with Central Luzon being positioned as a key hub for agricultural trade, food movement, and food security.

The programme centres on the Cold Storage Expansion Project, a flagship initiative under the Agriculture and Fisheries Modernization Act. The project will support the construction of modular and mega cold storage warehouses in strategic agricultural zones nationwide.

Modular cold storage warehouses will be deployed closer to production areas, giving growers and food supply chains access to local temperature-controlled capacity. Larger cold storage warehouses, with planned capacities of up to 8,000 pallet positions, are being designed as central storage hubs for high-volume agricultural regions.

The Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural and Fisheries Logistics Office is leading work on operational standards, temperature control, and synchronised supply movement across the facilities. The office was established under Department Order No. 1, Series of 2025, giving logistics a formal role inside the country’s food security framework.

Central Luzon’s role reflects its position between production, trade, transport, and urban consumption corridors. The region sits close to Clark, Subic, Metro Manila, and wider freight routes, making it a practical base for consolidation, cold storage, onward distribution, and inter-island trade support.

Cold storage capacity has become a strategic food-system asset across multiple regions. Agricultural supply chains lose value when produce sits too long without temperature control, when seasonal gluts cannot be stored, or when processing and distribution networks lack reliable chilled and frozen staging. Those losses move quickly through the chain, affecting growers, processors, wholesalers, retailers, foodservice operators, and importers.

The Philippines faces a particular logistics challenge because food movement must work across islands, ports, roads, agricultural zones, and dense urban demand centres. A cold store at the wrong point in the chain can become passive storage. A well-located facility, linked to transport schedules, market demand, quality control, and inventory data, can reduce volatility before produce reaches the consumer market.

Temperature-controlled logistics is attracting the same infrastructure focus internationally. In North America, Americold and EQT’s cold storage platform shows how institutional capital is being used to expand a specialist asset class that increasingly supports food resilience, import flows, and retail distribution.

The Philippine programme has a different structure, but the operating challenge is similar. Cold-chain expansion depends on maintenance discipline, refrigeration reliability, energy resilience, trained staff, handling standards, and onward transport links. Modular sites can bring capacity closer to production, while larger hub facilities can strengthen regional inventory control, but both models need accurate flow planning to avoid creating new bottlenecks.

Energy use will be central to the cost case. Refrigeration is expensive, and cold-chain expansion can quickly become an operating-cost problem if facilities are not designed and run efficiently. Insulation, refrigeration system selection, load planning, door discipline, preventive maintenance, and renewable or distributed power support will determine whether new capacity remains commercially usable over time.

The infrastructure programme gives the Philippines a route to reduce waste, improve market access, and strengthen food supply continuity. Its value will be measured less by the number of buildings delivered and more by whether those sites keep produce moving through controlled, reliable, and economically viable cold-chain networks.


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