BENCHWARMER
Ramon S. Dacawi
Six years
back, we heard that Region 1 was worried over the dwindling river flow from
these Cordillera uplands that is the life-blood of its lowland agriculture
economy. Region 1 said so in a message from its Regional Development Council
(RDC), the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) and the National
Irrigation Administration (NIA) to their counterparts up here in the
boondocks.
The Region 1 bodies reiterated the obvious: Less water flow, less food
production. What was missing was the less obvious, a fact ignored for
generations: Watershed preservation is a collaborative task, given the truth
that everybody, whether you’re up here or down there, lives in a watershed..
For so long, the Cordillera has been at the receiving end of neglect. In
a "user-friendly" view of national development, the resource base is
ignored until it fails to produce and deliver. Or when it refuses to, as in the
case of upland tribal villages now opposing new, "responsible" gold
mining explorations and operations because previous extractions had them left
holding the empty bag in an environment dug up and left to waste. Or when
the lowlands get flooded, something the plains easily perceive to have been
triggered by deforestation of the watersheds and siltation from the dams or
mines up here.
It's more than spilt milk that the Cordillera lost and sacrificed
through the extraction of its gold and the damming of its water resources - all
in the name of national development. Yet we're told the whimpering, the
shouting in our remaining wilderness, is over. We're told it's time to move on,
for the sins of neglect will no longer be repeated -- again. It’s no
longer simply “gold mining”, kiddo; its now “responsible mining”, as if the
qualifier works like a magic wand.
With its message, Region 1 (together with Regions 2 and 3, which also
benefit from the law of gravity) can help us square the account of national
development. Perhaps at the roundtable to discuss their worry over dwindling
water, we seek a quid pro quo.They can help us address the following suggested
resolutions to our national development planners and decision-makers in
imperial Metro Manila:
1.Urging the Department of Energy (DOE) to redefine "host
community" under the implementing rules of the Electric Power Industry
Reform Act (EPIRA), from one based on dam location to one anchored on the
river-basin concept.
You see, for every kwh produced and sold from the operation of the San
Roque Dam in Pangasinan, one centavo is set aside for livelihood and other
development projects for the "host community", to include watershed
conservation and protection.
While Benguet is where San Roque's watersheds are, the province can not
avail of the fund as it does not fall within that myopic definition of a
"host community" provided for by the EPIRA’s Implementing Rules and
Regulations (IRR).
The term is limited to where the dam is located, in this case in San
Nicolas and San Manuel in Pangasinan. Pangasinan is qualified to a share as
host province, so is Region 1 as host region. One centavo may mean nothing,
except when equated to the fact that San Roque has a 340-megawatt
capacity.
We pointed this injustice then Energy Secretary Vincent Perez came up for
a hearing on the IRAA of the EPIRA. He said the observation was “most
insightful” and assured it would be considered. Not so. When the IRR was
released, it adopted the old definition.
2. Urging the Office of the President, the Congress, the Departments of
Agriculture, Energy, Environment and Natural Resources, the National Power
Corp., the NIA and other national line agencies supposed to be concerned, to
come up with incentive policies for the keepers of the watersheds up
here.
For generations, the integrity of the Cordillera watersheds was
maintained not because of state policy but through indigenous wisdom
exemplified by the "tayan" of Mt. Province, the "lapat" of
the Tingguians and the "muyong" or "pinugo" of
Ifugao.
In fact, state laws were passed and are still in effect that restrict
and constrict the indigenous peoples' access to the land and forest resources
that they have conserved for centuries for their -- and the lowlands' --
survival.
The law did not allow them to have titles to their lands that are over
18 degrees in slope. It bans them from cutting trees situated 1,000 meters
above sea level and over. It was only lately that government began recognizing
their watershed preservation practices that are the original models of
community-based resource management.
The purpose of a watershed is to slow down the flow of water to the
river and to the sea, so that it will seep underground to recharge the natural
water table. That's what the rice terraces do -- slow down the water flow. This
system made the terraces monuments to "sustainable development", long
before world leaders started mouthing that term in the 1992 World Summit in Rio
de Janeiro.
3. Urging the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) and
Congress to include the preservation of the Cordillera mossy forests in the
country's Forest Management Plan, that is, if such plan exists and has been
ratified.
Our mossy forests up here serve as the water tanks and towers of the
river systems that are dammed for electricity of the urban centers and for
irrigation of the lowland farms.
They act like a sponge, harvesting and absorbing mist and rain,
releasing water gradually to form the rivulets, creeks and springs that form
the rivers that flow into the dams, and then piped and channeled to irrigate
the lowland rice lands. While their damp condition insulates the mossy forests
from heat, their natural elevation immediately above or beside the resinous and
easily combustible pine stands makes them also vulnerable to fires.
We are losing these unique and vital forests because conservation is
focused on the lower forests of these islands. We do not even have a national
forest fire management plan, and the Bureau of Fire Protection, whose
concentration and expertise are on structural fires, is also given jurisdiction
over forest and brush fires. .
4. Urging the National Water Resources Board (NWRB) and the NIA to review and
fine-tune equitably policies governing access to and harnessing of water
resources.
It took too long for the government to transfer the NWRB from the
infrastructure-based Department of Public Works and Highways to the Department
of Environment and Natural Resources.
We understand the NWRB had awarded water rights over rivers up here to
electric power developers and speculators from the outside without the
knowledge and consent of indigenous villagers who regard water as a common
resource.
Before he quit to become mayor of Bauko, Mt. Province, then NIA
regional director Abe Akilit saw the wisdom of including provisions for
sustainability of water sources in the agency’s irrigation development plans.
Yet we wonder how many irrigation projects in the past went to waste because of
their limit to infrastructure -- dam, inlet and outlet --, without ever taking
into account the protection of the watersheds that fed them and had since dried
up.
5. Urging the DOE and other (supposed to be) concerned agencies to share
electric power to all the villages up here in the Cordillera for the region’s
role as renewable energy source and resource. .
The two dams built in Benguet in the 50s -- the Binga and Ambuclao
– were recently on their death throes (before Ambuclao was
rehabilitated), yet some of our villages within spitting distance of these
power generators have yet to be energized. Some of the people displaced by
their construction remain uprooted, like pine that can't survive in lowland
relocation sites.
Perhaps the practical thing for the Cordillera RDC and NEDA to do is to
help the local government units seek grants for the building of mini-hydros to
be owned by these provinces,, towns and barangays. Given the wealth of the
Cordillera as a gold mine in hydropower, hydro plants continue to be built, yet
these are operated and owned in perpetuity by investors.
There’s wisdom in limiting their operation and turning these facilities
to the host communities after the investors have recouped their investments and
made profits, as in a build-operate-transfer scheme. Personally, I wonder if
new host communities took the developers’ promise hook, line and sinker and
agreed to investors’ ownership in perpetuity.
Residents of Kapangan and Kibungan in Benguet who are opposing the
construction of a weir for a hydro plant may find the B-0-T scheme less onerous
to adopt if they are left with no choice but to accept the project that the
National Commission on Indigenous Peoples claimed was subjected to a residents’
vote.
Tongue-in-cheek, the Cordillera pioneered the B-O-T scheme of
development. They built the mines and dams here, operated them and then
transferred the gold and electric power, including the taxes, to Makati and
Metro-Manila. (e-mail: mondaxbench@kyahoo.com for comments.)
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