Mt Data ravaged; illegal logging, encroachment on
>> Tuesday, October 14, 2014
By
Dexter See
BAUKO, Mountain Province – The
encroachment of Mount Data by commercial vegetable farmers from Benguet and
illegal logging here is on and has significantly affected the environment
within the forest reservation, local officials said.
Following this, the Cordillera office of the
Department of Environment and Natural Resources said it
supports establishment of a multipurpose
building to serve as watchtower and police center to abate illegal activities
in the national park particularly along tri-boundaries of Benguet, Ifugao and
Mountain Province.
Paquito Moreno, DENR regional executive
director, Bauko mayor Abraham B. Akilit and Buguias, Benguet mayor
MelchorDiclas recently inspected the area and found out reports of illegal
logging and expansion of vegetable farms were true.
Earlier, Akilit urged the DENR, police and
provincial governments of Benguet, Ifugao and Mountain Province to pool
resources to immediately put up the facility to stop massive deforestation in
the tri-boundary and spare over 300 hectares of undisturbed forests from being
ravaged.
“Our visit to Mount Data recently provided us
with a ground appreciation on what is really happening in the area, thus, the
need to have enhanced coordination efforts in order to guarantee the
preservation and protection of the remaining forest cover in the affected
areas,” Moreno stressed.
He said Benguet portion of the Mount Data
plateau is already heavily saturated while the Mountain Province portion
already has patches of denuded areas that are hunting ground of bird catchers.
On the Ifugao side of the forest reservation,
Moreno described the situation as really a cause for concern because the
commercial vegetable farms in the Benguet side were moving in towards the
undisturbed forests of Tinoc and Hungduan towns, thus, the urgent need for
coordination among government agencies and local governments in the area.
Mount Data is a mountain located in the
Cordillera Central mountain range rising to a height of 2,310 meters (7,578
feet) north of Luzon. It is about 50 kilometers north of Baguio on the borders
of the provinces of Benguet and Mountain Province along the Halsema Highway.
The mountain and surrounding area has been
declared a National Park since 1936. In 1940 the park was expanded to 5512
hectares. The slopes of the mountain are covered with pine forests and mossy
oak forests.
“Our primary concern is forest protection
that is why we have to involve all stakeholders in our all-out effort to
preserve the state of the environment in Mount Data for the benefit of the
present and future generation of Filipinos,” Moreno said.
Akilit said the Mount Data watershed plays a
key role in the economic growth of Northern Luzon because it is the headwaters
of the Chico, Agno, Abra and Magat rivers providing abundant water supply for
agriculture, industrial and domestic uses as well as power generation for the
360-megawatt Magat dam, 125-megawatt Binga dam, 105 Ambuclao dam and the
354-megawatt San Roque dam.
He said immediate action of concerned
agencies and local governments must be put in place before the vital pine stand
in the Cordillera will be gone and converted into gardens resulting to scarcity
of water.
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