Bamboo can save PH’s balding mountains

ILOILO City – Bamboo can help increase the country’s forest cover aside from helping combat the effects of climate change.

According to Environment secretary Roy Cimatu during the recently 1st ASEAN Bamboo Congress at the Iloilo Convention Center here, bamboo – touted as the Earth’s tallest grass – has great potentials to pull the country out of its environmental woes, especially as a strategic tool for climate change mitigation and adaptation.

“Bamboo has been proven to adapt well to the changing climatic conditions of the world and has made significant contributions to mitigate the causes and effects of climate change,” said Cimatu in his message.

The plan to increase bamboo plantations and make Panay Island the Bamboo Capital of the Philippines in manufacturing engineered bamboo will ease the pressure on the country’s forests, Cimatu said.

He further disclosed that engineered bamboos are as sturdy as lumber products.

Among the South East Asian nations, the Philippines ranked lowest in terms of forest cover, with an estimated 7,014,155.71 hectares or 23.38 percent of its official total land area of 30 million hectares.

“Bamboo reduces the need for timber resources, enhances carbon sequestration, biodiversity preservation and low-cost rehabilitation of degraded lands. We envision producing engineered bamboo products as a substitute for actual lumber requirement of our country, instead of cutting trees from our forests,” said Cimatu.

Through this, Cimatu said, it will slowly increase the forest cover of the Philippines for the next several years or decades.

“We have already conducted surveys as to the available areas which are potential for bamboo plantations in the region. The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) in Region 6 has also allotted a budget of P10 million this year to implement the plan,” said Regional Executive Director Francisco E. Milla Jr.

The 2019 P10-million budget targets to prioritize the planting of bamboos under the Enhanced National Greening Program (ENGP) implemented by the DENR.

The budget includes the expenditures for establishing three nurseries for priority provinces, namely: Iloilo, Negros Occidental and Capiz; production of 100,000 bamboo seedlings; and capacity building for priority stakeholders and DENR personnel.

The bamboo industry has been considered a “sunset industry” or a business that still exists but is not gaining well as before.

With the government’s plan to revive it, that would have to change soon. (DENR/PN)

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