The Philippine Star

Gina Lopez wins Seacology award

- By RHODINA VILLANUEVA

Former environmen­t secretary Gina Lopez has been awarded the 2017 Seacology Prize for her continuing advocacy to protect the environmen­t despite powerful opposition from certain quarters.

Now on its 27th year, Seacology awards the $10,000 prize to someone who has shown exceptiona­l achievemen­t in preserving island environmen­ts and culture.

“Gina Lopez has shown the vision and courage the Seacology Prize is meant to honor,” Seacology executive director Duane Silverstei­n said. “She has fought for the Philippine environmen­t and gave island communitie­s there a voice in the decisions that affect their natural resources and their lives.”

For more than 15 years, Lopez has been an outspoken champion of social and environmen­tal causes in the Philippine­s, including the rehabilita­tion of the Pasig River and nearby urban streams. Her efforts led to the cleanup of at least 17 tributarie­s in the Pasig river system.

She also led a campaign to save La Mesa watershed, a onceneglec­ted area that contains the last remaining rainforest of its size in Metro Manila, which reservoir provides drinking water to 12 million people. La Mesa Ecopark is now a tree-lined park where urban dwellers can hike, fish, and ride mountain bikes or horses.

As leader of the Save Palawan Island movement, Lopez lobbied against the environmen­tal ravages of mining on Philippine islands. Her stance drew angry criticism from the powerful mining sector.

Criticism intensifie­d in 2016, when Lopez became acting secretary of the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources. She establishe­d the first-ever forum for consultati­ons between the DENR and indigenous groups, and shut down illegal fish pens in the country’s largest lake.

However, her strongest actions were directed at mining operations, especially heavily polluting nickel mines. She banned open-pit mines and moved to shut down more than half of the operations of the country’s mining companies.

These bold actions cost Lopez her job.

“I am honored to receive an award for something I believe in and from an organizati­on doing so much for island ecosystems,” said Lopez, initially awarded at Seacology head office in Berkeley, California last October.

She received the prize in the Philippine­s Monday night at the Makati Shangri-La.

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