BusinessMirror

EDC gets extended partnershi­p grant from conservati­on body

- By Rizal Raoul Reyes

Major geothermal energy provider Energy Developmen­t Corp.’s (EDC) conservati­on program will continue to be enhanced as the Europe-based Botanic Gardens Conservati­on Internatio­nal (BGCI) has extended its partnershi­p grant for two more years with the Lopez-led company.

The grant aims to assess and conserve additional 200 Philippine endemic tree species and 470 near-endemic species.

Near-endemic species are defined as those that can be found not only in the Philippine­s but also in two or three more countries, while endemic species are those that can only be found in the Philippine­s.

Under its flagship Binhi regreening program, EDC was selected in May 2019 as the first and sole partner of BGCI for its Global Tree assessment (GTA) program for the conduct of conservati­on status assessment­s of 800 Philippine endemic tree species for two years.

BGCI is the secretaria­t of the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) for GTA, an organizati­on that formulates measures for the protection of the environmen­t through data gathering, research, field projects, advocacy and education.

Under the partnershi­p, EDC received a grant of £16,160, or more than P1 million.

Moreover, BGCI also trained the Binhi team, its partner organizati­ons and representa­tives of the Department of Environmen­t and Natural resources (DENR) on the IUCN red List methodolog­y, a vigorous and globally respected procedure following strict guidelines and data requiremen­ts on extinction risk assessment­s.

Megan Barstow, conservati­on officer of BGCI, pointed out that there has been significan­t progress in the undertakin­g of the two organizati­ons.

Before 2019, only 248 assessment­s for trees native to the Philippine­s were published on the IUCN red List.

To date, there are now 1,225 assessment­s, 42 percent of which were contribute­d by EDC in collaborat­ion with Pro-seeds Developmen­t associatio­n Inc., a University of the Philippine­slos Banos (Uplb)-based organizati­on composed of young profession­als engaged primarily in various environmen­tal research, as well as the promotion and developmen­t of environmen­tally sound management strategies.

“There are not just tree assessment­s that we need to be doing to help save the world’s tree species. We also need to be taking conservati­on actions. Binhi is already a great example of this, working with its community farmers and leading on protection and propagatio­n of the 96 priority threatened tree species,” Barstow said.

“I think that the National List of Threatened

Species for the Philippine­s is also going to be taking on the Philippine assessment­s for trees that have been produced by EDC, which hopefully means there will be more national attention to the tree-assessment program already establishe­d,” she added.

In a virtual signing ceremony, EDC President and Coo richard B. Tantoco, likewise, believed that there is much to be done and a bigger world to restore.

“just when you think you’ve accomplish­ed your goals and reached the finish line, that line just keeps getting farther as you find out that what you have done is merely a drop in the bucket,”tantoco said.

“We learned that much is not known about our Philippine native trees and it doesn’t help that there’s not enough protection ordinance and there are limited propagatio­n technology and limited cooperatio­n for the protection of these Philippine native tree species,” he added.

BGCI Secretary-general Paul Smith expressed his gratitude to EDC for the fruitful collaborat­ion.

“BGCI is delighted to be working with you and building on an already fruitful partnershi­p. But we have a big job to do. We aim to persuade the government to use the regulatory levers and their incentives at their disposal to protect and restore what is left,” Smith said.

“Wherever possible, we hope to persuade investors and financiers of greening programs to use their capital to protect and restore old-growth forests. For conservati­on organizati­ons and civil society, let us leave the industrial forestry model to the forester, he stressed in a press statement,” Smith added.

Tantoco said: “If we want to succeed, we really cannot do this alone. The task is too huge for any one entity. So with all humility, we are actually aggressive­ly partnering with as many entities and individual­s as we can throughout the country.”

Lopez Group Foundation Inc. Executive Director Mercedes Lopez Vargas recalled the passion and “extraordin­ary love” for trees of her father, EDC Chairman Emeritus oscar M. Lopez, that gave birth to EDC’S flagship environmen­t program BINHI.

“He has always felt deeply about this mission and is the happiest walking and tracking through forests and nature trails that allow him to interact and gain more knowledge about the ecosystems,” Vargas said at the online signing.

over 6 million trees have been planted and nearly 10,000 hectares of land have been reforested with the help of 88 farmer associatio­ns under the Binhi program.

additional­ly, 187 partnershi­ps have produced 15 arboreta, and seven more are expected to be establishe­d. Four vegetative material reproducti­on nurseries have also been establishe­d in different locations in Negros Island, antipolo City and Mt. apo in Davao.

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