Manila Bulletin

Reforestat­ion is crucial to fight climate change

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As countries around the world endeavor to prevent the global climate crisis from reaching catastroph­ic levels by 2030, reforestat­ion remains a basic but vital strategy in mitigating climate change.

A study by academic journal Science revealed that one billion hectares of forest could reduce 300 gigatons of carbon or 25 percent in the atmosphere.

In the Philippine­s, restoring forest cover is not only a matter of climate solution but of environmen­tal survival.

According to the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources’ Forest Management Bureau (DENR–FMB), every year, the country loses 47,000 hectares of forest cover. Around 1.2 million hectares of denuded and degraded forest lands of the country need to be rehabilita­ted by 2022 to prevent landslides and ensure water availabili­ty.

In the private sector, renewable energy leader Energy Developmen­t Corporatio­n (EDC) is at the forefront in responding to these challenges, leveraging its flagship environmen­tal program Binhi to reforest degraded lands, rescue vanishing native trees, develop ecotourism areas, and provide livelihood to local communitie­s.

Since its launch in 2011, EDC’s BINHI has successful­ly restored 9,500 hectares of forest land with 96 premium native trees species under threat of extinction.

This year, the program is expanding its scale to increase the Philippine­s’ forest cover. In its recent celebratio­n of Binhi Day, EDC’s facilities across the country rallied employees, community members, and other institutio­nal partners to plant more trees in their respective areas. A total of 10,578 trees were planted across the different sites.

Binhi’s partners for these treeplanti­ng activities included the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) and the Community Environmen­t and Natural Resources Offices (CENRO), local government units, schools, barangays, and even volunteers from the military.

“The scale and breadth of our reforestat­ion efforts is proof that business and the environmen­t can co-exist sustainabl­y. Doubling our efforts to restore our forests can take us a long way in protecting our planet and securing it for the generation who will bear the brunt of our inaction,” said Atty. Allan V. Barcena, head of EDC’s Corporate Social Responsibi­lity and Public Relations Group.

Earlier this year, the program also joined a global effort to identify, assess, and protect native trees species. Botanic Gardens Conservati­on Internatio­nal (BGCI), the world’s largest plant conservati­on network and the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN)’S secretaria­t, tapped EDC as the first Philippine partner for its Global Tree Assessment program (GTA).

BGCI aims to create the first global list of tree species and their conservati­on assessment­s by 2020.

To date, only 25,000 of the world’s 80,000 tree species have global or national assessment­s for their risk of extinction. As BGCI’s partner, EDC will gather informatio­n on 800 Philippine endemic tree species.

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 ??  ?? Vegetative Materials Reproducti­on facilities located in Valencia, Negros Oriental and in Antipolo City, propagate 96 threatened native Binhi tree species and prepare them for replanting
Vegetative Materials Reproducti­on facilities located in Valencia, Negros Oriental and in Antipolo City, propagate 96 threatened native Binhi tree species and prepare them for replanting

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