BSU eyes 100 has. bamboo forest in La Trinidad town
>> Wednesday, January 22, 2025
By Liza Agoot
LA TRINIDAD, Benguet -- The Benguet State University here is set to
establish about 100 hectares of bamboo forest to support reforestation
efforts, the bamboo textile project and engineered bamboo production.
Dr. Roscinto Ian Lumbres, BSU vice president for
research and extension, in a briefing Tuesday, said the project began in
2024 with the production of propagules that were planted starting this
year.
He said they used the PHP5 million bamboo
development project fund from Senator Loren Legarda for the propagation
of planting materials in San Pascual, Tuba, Benguet.
Initial reforestation sites include a two-hectare
area at the Benguet Corp. in Itogon and the BSU compound in the
municipality of Mankayan, he said.
Lumbres said the goal is to plant “bayog” and the “giant” bamboo species in at least 20 hectares this year.
He added that they are producing the “bayog” and the “giant” bamboo, which are indigenous to the region and the country.
He said they have teamed up with cooperatives to
be more productive, noting that they have inked a memorandum of
agreement with the manufacturer of the engineered bamboo in support of
the wood industry.
“The BSU project is also part
of the regional bamboo initiative that is in support (of) the bamboo
production of the Cordillera,” he said.
Lumbres said they are also developing products,
such as soap, using bamboo as raw materials instead of the usual
baskets, bags, chairs, tables, and others.
He also mentioned the Philippine Textile Research
Institute (PTRI) - Department of Science and Technology (DOST) that
established the Bamboo Textile Fiber Innovation Hub at the Abra State
University campus in the municipality of Lagangilang, to help boost the
country’s bamboo fiber production.
He said the Japanese government has found interest
in the university’s revival of its bamboo forest area during their
visit to the school last December.
“They are coming back next week to finalize the partnership for the bamboo area project,” he said.
BSU president, Dr. Kenneth Laruan, during the same
event, said the project is timely as the university celebrates its 39th
charter anniversary this month with the theme “Advancing knowledge,
research, technology, and environmental stewardship for a sustainable
tomorrow.”
"What happens in the Cordillera ecological system
may affect other regions. That is why there is a need to make some
refocus and come up with programs for the environment," he said. -- PNA
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