PUNCHLINE
By Ike Señeres
Global warming triggers a chain reaction
that is not too difficult to understand, and because of that, we should all
understand how this chain reaction works, because our lives and the lives of our
children would depend on whether we could reverse this chain reaction or not.
Many say that common sense is not so common anymore nowadays, but it is time
that we should put some sense into our actions against global warming, because
it is already a life and death proposition.
Simply put, global warming destroys the
corals that serve as the habitat of the planktons that serve as the food of the
fish and the other marine life in our oceans. When corals are gone, planktons
are also gone and with that, the fish are also gone. There are reports however
that even if the planktons are not yet gone, meaning that even if the fish
would still have something to eat, they are already migrating up north, because
they could no longer survive the heat in the water that is caused by global
warming.
By the way, even if the corals are gone,
the planktons would not be gone if only the mangroves are not gone too. Of
course there is hope that we could still bring back the corals and the
mangroves, but that is not enough, because we still have a lot to do in order
to slow down or turn back global warming. What is important is for us to
understand that our oceans are our sources of protein, and without protein,
mankind will die. It is as simple as that.
Most people
probably do not know that about half of the world’s oxygen is produced by
phytoplankton, the one celled plants that live at the ocean’s surface. Aside
from performing the critical function of absorbing the carbon dioxide that is
found in the oceans, these plants also serve as food for the herbivore marine
creatures that are in turn eaten by the carnivore creatures, as this process
goes up in the food chain.
It could be said
that these little plants in the ocean are doing what the trees are doing on
land, because the trees are also absorbing the carbon dioxide at the same time
that they are also producing oxygen. It could also be said that these planktons
in the ocean together with the trees on land are the ones that are keeping a
balance between the supply of carbon dioxide and oxygen, a balance that could
mean life or death for mankind, depending on whether the balance will be tilted
or not. That said that however, there is more to keeping this balance than just
planktons and trees.
According to the
prevailing wisdom, global warming is caused by the greenhouse gasses in the
atmosphere, carbon dioxide included. While that may be true, there is another
cause of global warming, and that is the excessive removal of petroleum from
the ground, including those removed from the deposits below the oceans. It may
not be a well known fact, but petroleum deposits are actually the natural
coolants under the earth, and with these natural coolants gone, everything
under the earth gets heated up, thus also causing heat from the earth to go up
into the atmosphere.
Once the petroleum
deposits are removed from below the earth, they cause more damage above the
earth, because they produce carbon dioxide when they are used as fuels and
lubricants. It goes without saying therefore that one sure way to reduce the
emissions of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere is to replace petroleum based
fuels and lubricants with renewable materials that should not have petroleum
based ingredients. Since many of these renewable materials are plant based,
they would even produce oxygen as they are grown.
Speaking of chain
reactions, I am advocating the planting of trees within and around the
watershed areas. If we plant trees in these areas, the chain reaction will
start with the improvement of the water holding capability in the soil, thus it
will prevent floods on one hand, and increase the supply of water in the
watersheds on the other hand. Aside from that, it will also increase the supply
of food products that could be harvested from the trees.
Veritas Social Empowerment,
Inc. (VSEI) a non-government organization (NGO) has created a supply chain that
is sure to create a chain reaction that would work against global warming.
Together with Mga Anak ng Inang Daigdig (MAID), another NGO,
Veritas has been granted a stewardship agreement by the Department of
Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) that allows them to plant trees in135
hectares of land within the Marikina watershed. The area is adjacent to an
ancestral domain of a Dumagat tribe that has been granted a Certificate
of Ancestral Domain Title (CADT) by the National Commission for Indigenous
Peoples (NCIP).
Members of MAID who are mostly from the
former Smoky Mountain dumpsite in Tondo have already planted organically and
naturally grown fruits and vegetables in the area, aside from trees. Both VSEI
and MAID were founded by Fr. Ben Beltran, SVD, the longest serving missionary
priest in Smoky Mountain who is also a member of the Philippine Alliance of
Ex-Seminarians and Ex-Priests (PAXX).
Organic fruits and vegetables from the
Marikina watershed, including those that are planted by the Dumagat tribe
are now being marketed in the Sacred Heart Parish in Kamuning, Quezon City. I
am hoping that this experiment will succeed, because it will create a market
for the crops that will in turn sustain the livelihood of those who are trying
to preserve the ecosystem in the watershed. VSEI now needs donations to build a
firewall that will protect the trees that they have planted.
For feedback, email iseneres@yahoo.com or text +639083159262
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