Mayor pushes greenhouses to stop ravaging of forest
>> Sunday, October 12, 2014
By Andrew Doga-ong
BAUKO,
Mountain Province – This town’s top executive is now pushing construction
of greenhouses to discourage farmers from further encroaching on forests,
address severe weather conditions brought about by climate change, watershed
degradation and low vegetable production.
Mayor
Abraham Akilit said technology intervention like constructing permanent
greenhouses for the vegetable farmers will partly address issues on climate
change, continued forest destruction as well as enhance vegetable production of
farmers.
Greenhouses
are structures that protect crops from hailstorm and typhoon winds and excess
rain waters and heat.
Providing
support to the farmers to construct their permanent greenhouses would stop them
from expanding their vegetable farms onto the mossy forests, he said.
Some
farmers he added, are encroaching on mossy forests not only in Bauko but also
in the adjoining towns of Buguias in Benguet and Tinoc in Ifugao.
Akilit
said forests have vital role in climate change mitigation.
Forest
ecosystem is said to help store greenhouse gasses as it absorbs carbon dioxide
and other pollutants in the atmosphere through the process of photosynthesis.
Instead
of farming hectares with one or two cropping per year, farmers will just
confine their farming in smaller areas with greenhouses but with multiple
cropping, he said.
Akilit
said farmers can have multiple cropping in greenhouses as their crops are
protected anytime of the year even during severe weather conditions like heavy
rains, strong winds and even frost due to extremely low temperature.
Vegetable
production will surely increase and crop quality is improved while crop damages
are minimized if not eliminated in a greenhouse, quipped the mayor.
Akilit,
whose town hosts the Mt. Data National Park and wide tracts of mossy forests,
broached his idea of greenhouse support to the farmers during the
launching of the Integrated Natural Resources and Environmental Management
Program (INREEMP) of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources
suggesting it would be included in the program.
INREMP,
a seven-year (2014-2020) water management project with a P2.2 Billion funding,
seeks to reduce and reverse the degradation of watersheds caused by forest
denudation and unsustainable farming practices. The project covers watershed
areas along the upper Chico River Basin.
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