BENCHWARMER
Ramon Dacawi
This is an exercise in redundancy – a repetition of the obvious - about
the inconvenient environmental truth conveniently being ignored. It’s been my
beef for years now.
There’s nothing much on the ground to substantiate our
understanding and appreciation of “sustainable development”. The catch-phrase
remains the most abused yet actually ignored since it was minted and printed on
that paper deal 18 years ago in Rio de Janeiro as our rallying point for world
survival.
The gap between theory and practice, between word and action,
continues to widen. It’s an aberration we refuse to see. It’s glossed over by a
culture of development that thrives more on jargon than on action. As it is and
was, our world leaders and we lesser mortals proclaim to be anchored
on protecting the fragile environment for the sake of the future, yet advance
the economic interests and progress of nations at the expense of nature.
Three years back, we had a debacle in Copenhagen, where the
substance of the talks got drowned in the rhetoric and arguments of unreason
from the economically and politically powerful nations. Almost expectedly, the
rich muddled the voices of the poor they had long tagged “ Third World ” or the
“South” and from which they draw raw materials to sustain their economic
advance and comfort.
Even with paper deals forged in the past, “global warming” or
“climate change” remains a conversation piece rather than addressed on the
ground because of its urgency. The issue hardly transcends the
confines of “round tables” and “summits” and conferences where pacts
for action are signed and soon forgotten.. Despite years of
posturing to “Save Mother Earth”, we have yet to factor in nature beyond lip
service in our march to progress – if not perdition. While we seem to all agree
how crucial this need has become, we continue to go the other way, towards
dressing the goose for the stew.
Mikhail Gorbachev, head of Green Cross International, issued the
ignored warning at the 2004 World Urban Forum in Barcelona . In his keynote, he
couldn’t help but point out the patent disunity between form and substance.
“Enough is enough (of these environmental treaties that never take off the
ground),” he said. He went on to rattle the dismal failure of nations to come
close to targets in poverty reduction and climate disaster prevention.
On the ground, development is measured in terms of infrastructure
harnessing the finite environmental resource. It’s a “user-friendly”
process, for the benefit of the end-user. This was the obvious view we got from
a briefing for media back in 2010 on the North Luzon Agfri-business Growth
Quadrangle at the Heroes Hall in Malacanang.
The Quad report was impressive in terms of completed and on-going
infrastructure projects to push agricultural, tourism, business and economic
growth: airports and seaports, irrigation and power generation dams, highways,
farm-to-market roads and post-harvest facilities.
Except perhaps for the wind farm project in Bangui ,Ilocos Norte
and a “Jatropha Mega Nursery”, the report hardly touched on
the environmental dimension needed in building a super region
corridor of progress. While efforts to mitigate the effects of drought, or El
Nino, on agriculture production and the again looming power crisis were
mentioned, the crucial issue of environmental sustainability, particularly the
preservation of the integrity of the watershed or the water source that is the
life-blood of agricultural productivity and energy generation was not. It’s
quite understandable, as the composition of the quadrangle board is limited to
those in the agriculture, highways, energy and tourism departments.
An official pointed out watershed conservation and protection is
not the turf of the agriculture department. As we pointed out, perhaps the
board might consider factoring in the Department of Environment and Natural
Resources as a stakeholder in the quadrangle equation to make the push for
regional development sustainable, practical, holistic, integrated,
forward-looking, dependable, result-oriented, mission and vision inspired and
whatever indicators, benchmarks, techniques, strategies, key result areas of
success there may be found in the expanding gobbledygook of development,
Even as we continue building dams and harnessing and re-channeling
the continuously ebbing water flow, the utter lack of an environmental
dimension would eventually bring to a halt the progress promised by these
infrastructure projects and programs.
Specifically, I wonder how many of our irrigation
facilities eventually dried up simply because of the
limited inlet-dam-outlet program of work formula. At the briefing,
fellow newsman Dexter See asked why agri officials turned down a recommendation
that five percent of any irrigation project cost be set aside for
preservation of the water source. It was briefly answered but I couldn’t hear
the explanation due to the feeble voice coming out of the sound system.
As the briefing was on, I was sure fires were decimating portions
of the pine forests of the Cordillera that, time and again, we are
told, is the vital watershed cradle of Northern Luzon .
The DENR may be partly blamed for its lapse in providing funds to
prevent and suppress forest fires. The department had been trying to, an
employee told me several years ago, yet it hardly got the attention given to
the agriculture sector during congressional budget hearings. She offered the
sneaky suspicion this corner quoted earlier - treescan not vote, but
farmers can.
Under a unique protocol, fire prevention and suppression is under
the command of the Bureau of Fire Protection which concentrates on
infrastructure and hardly has equipment and trained personnel to respond to
forest fires. The country’s few forest fire management experts are all with the
Cordillera office of the DENR, yet their expertise is not being tapped as there
is hardly funding for their operation. Perhaps because the fire-prone pine
forests, together with the vital mossy forests that are the water tanks of the
rivers that are the life=blood of agriculture and energy production, are unique
to this upland region and therefore do not merit priority in the
over-all national forest conservation plan that’s focused on the
lower dipterocarp, molave and mangrove stands.
As borne out in that Quad briefing, the pattern of development is
exploitative and extractive, anchored on infrastructure and economic
development. . This “utak semento” or mind-set for concrete explains why even
the chairmanship of the National Water Resources Board, which is supposed to
regulate water rights and use, was, for years, under the Department of Public
Works and Highways before it was transferred to the DENR. Aptly, the DPWH is no
longer represented in the board. Neither is the DA, as it should be regulated,
being the country’s top irrigation water developer.
With DENR now at the helm of the NWRB, perhaps the view of
development from this Cordillera watershed cradle can now be asserted over the
DA and the Department of Energy. After all, the NWRB motto takes on the meaning
of sustainable development: Managing the country’s water resource for present
and future generations”.
How do we, as keepers of the watersheds relate to these
aberrations in development? For one, it would be interesting to
check with the NWRB how many of our rivers up here had been applied for and are
now covered by water rights of private developers of hydro-electric power - for
their corporate present and future.(e-mail: mondaxbench@yahoo.com for comments).
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