DENR Sec hit for allowing Sierra Madre tree-cutting
>> Sunday, September 9, 2018
SOLANO, Nueva Vizcaya --
A Franciscan priest famous for his decades-long and staunch defense of the
Sierra Madre Mountain Range has accused Environment Secretary Roy Cimatu of
abandoning his job, criticizing the official for easing tree-cutting rules to
accelerate projects under the government's Build, Build, Build program.
"While global
environmental bodies are intent on planting trees and saving the remaining
forests in an eleventh-hour bid to restrain global warming, our very own
environmental authorities have instead done the opposite," said Fr. Pete
Montallana, chairperson of the Save Sierra Madre Network Alliance (SSMNA).
"We should be able
to trust that the Department of Environment and Natural Resources -- with all
its studies, expertise and resources -- would lead efforts to mitigate climate
change, But instead, what we are getting is the opposite," the Franciscan
priest said.
Late in August, the DENR
relaxed its own rules on the cutting and relocation of trees affected by the
construction of government roads, bridges and flood control dikes.
In an order dated July
18, Cimatu shifted the responsibility of issuing tree-cutting permits from the
16 regional DENR chiefs down to the 140 community environment and natural
resources officers across the nation.
The DENR made the
revision in a bid to fast-track infrastructure projects of the Department of
Public Works and Highways (DPWH), after a Commission on Audit report blamed
delays in the processing of tree-cutting permits for the slow implementation of
the “Build Build Build” program.
A 2017 COA report
revealed that about P73.4 billion worth of infrastructure projects under
“Build, Build, Build” were either delayed, suspended, terminated, or not
implemented. It cited delays in the processing of tree-cutting permits as one
of the reason.
But Montallana condemned
the DENR chief's move, saying that by easing tree-cutting rules he was in
effect ditching his main task.
"The DENR's mandate
is very clear," Montallana said, noting that this mandate is plainly
stated in the agency's own website."The DENR is the primary agency
responsible for the conservation, management, development, and proper use of
the country’s environment and natural resources, specifically forest and
grazing lands," the priest said, reading out the mandate.
Scientists note that
deforestation produces about 24% of global greenhouse gas emissions and is the
second leading cause of global warming.
In fact, tropical rainforests, deforestation adds more carbon dioxide to
the atmosphere than that produced by all the cars and trucks on the world’s
roads.
"To stem climate
change, the top recommendations of scientists are 'leave forests standing' and
'plant more trees,' " Montallana notes. "We don't have to be rocket
scientists to realize that the DENR's move is very wrong," he adds.
The Franciscan priest
noted that when typhoon Yolanda hit the country in 2013, with wind speeds of
315kph, 10,000lives were lost and damage to property and to the country’s
economy has been estimated to be at least P650 billion ($13 billion).
This monstrous damage
occurred when global temperature rise was 0.8 ̊C, Montallana said, warning that
a 1.5 ̊C rise -- which scientists have said we are about to reach -- will
surely bring storms with far higher wind speeds.
Over the past decades,
scientists have warned that our increasing use of fossil fuels is adding
heat-trapping gases to the earth’s atmosphere, causing mountain glaciers and
ice masses to melt, sea levels to rise, plant blooming to shift and extreme
weather to occur -- including stronger and more frequent storms.
"Will the gains of
the Build, Build, Build program far outweigh the costs of damages and the lives
lost from another more powerful super typhoon -- one that is just waiting to
occur, as we are moving closer to 1.5 degrees centigrade?" the priest
asked.
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