BANTAY GOBYERNO
Ike Señeres
It is no
longer possible to prevent climate change, but it is still possible to control
it at a point that it no longer worsens. That is what the global summit in
Paris is trying to do, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to a point that it
will not go beyond a limit that would already make the damage irreversible. It
may just be a matter of semantics, but there is a big difference between
climate change adaptation and climate change mitigation.
As I see it, adaptation sounds like a defeatist approach, as if we are
already resigned to the fact that there is nothing that we could do about
climate change except to adapt to it. I prefer mitigation as a more positive
approach, somewhat akin to disaster risk mitigation.
Accepting adaptation as the only way is just like accepting safety
nets as the only way to deal with globalization. As in a circus, safety nets
are installed on the presumption that the trapeze artists would fall. In the
case of globalization, our best way is to prepare to win, and not to prepare to
fall.
In climate change therefore, we
should prepare to prevent any more damage, rather than prepare to just adapt.
No one seems to be stressing the point, but there is actually a direct
correlation between climate change and disaster risk. On one hand, there should
be climate change mitigation. On the other hand, there should be disaster risk
mitigation.
Climate change mitigation involves reducing greenhouse gases and
increasing carbon sinks by way of reforestation. That is the simple mathematics
of human survival. Scientists warn that once the tipping point of global
warming is reached, climate change will become irreversible.
That leaves us with some breathing space; because that means that it is
still reversible as of now. That sounds easier said than done, but that does
not mean that it is not doable. Going back to the simple mathematics, all we
have to do really is to decrease the consumption of petroleum fuels and to
increase the production of oxygen.
Since the consumption of petroleum fuels boils down to the use of
energy, the solution should be the utilization of renewable energy sources. The
production of oxygen simply means restoring the natural forests, and not just
simply planting trees.
Some countries have already set their own targets as to how much
consumption of petroleum fuels they are going to reduce or to put it another
way, how much volume of renewable energy they are going to utilize, both in
terms of percentages.
Some countries have also set targets as to how much of the natural forest
cover they are going to restore, also based on percentages. As it is now,
humankind does not really have any choice but to do the simple mathematics.
The only way to reduce (subtraction) the percentage of using greenhouse
gases is to increase (addition) the percentage of using renewable energy. The
only way to reduce (subtraction) carbon dioxide is to increase (addition)
oxygen.
I do not know if anyone has proposed it before, but I now propose
that all of our provinces should be required to set their own percentage
targets for increasing their percentage of renewable energy production (and
consumption) on one hand, and increasing their percentage of reforestation
(restoration of forest cover) on the other hand. The key towards implementing
this idea is data gathering and data base management.
At any given time, the provincial governments should know how much
renewable energy they are already producing and consuming. They should also
know how much of the natural (original) forest cover they are already able to
restore.
It’s a long story to tell, but the more forest cover they are able
to restore, the more they would be able to increase their disaster risk
mitigation, at least in terms of rains and floods. Scientists are saying that
the more forest cover is restored, the more rains will come. And even if more
rains will come, lesser floods would come, because the trees in the mountains
would be able to absorb the rainwater in their roots.
Not only floods would be prevented, but soil erosion would also be
prevented, thus reducing the risks of landslides. These two are just short term
benefits, because the long term benefit really is for the trees to supply more
water to the watersheds, waterways and aquifers.
There are actually more benefits to reforestation than meets the eye.
Obviously, many of the trees in the forests would also supply food by way of
fruits and other edible tree products. Aside from these, all of the trees could
be trimmed to produce renewable energy by way of gasifier plants, also known as
dendro thermal energy.
Let us remember that we lost our natural forests because we were cutting
trees without replanting new seedlings. We should no longer commit the same
mistake. There is nothing wrong with cutting trees for as long as we keep growing
new trees to replace those that we have cut.
By the way, reforestation should also include the planting of mangroves
in our shorelines, a smart thing to do because it will not only trigger a
supply chain that will give us more seafood, but will also cool down the
temperatures in the sea water thus also reducing global warming.
Going back to my proposal, the challenge of climate change mitigation
should be subdivided to the provinces, leaving the tasks of overall management
and monitoring to the national government. This is in line with the principle
of subsidiarity, a principle that says that the biggest problems should be
subdivided into the smallest manageable parts or delegated to the smallest
productive units.
Due to their size, the provinces would generally encompass huge areas
that are in effect the same areas covered by the natural ecosystems. If actions
at the provincial level are not enough, then the coordination could be elevated
to the regional levels by way of the Regional Development Councils (RDCs), thus
enabling the provinces to cover the broader ecosystems.
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