Manila Standard

DENR set to map public lands for developmen­t of salt industry

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THE Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) is set to map and identify public lands, including portions of municipals waters, that are suitable for salt production areas in a bid to revitalize the country’s salt industry.

The DENR move follows the effectivit­y of Republic Act (RA) 11985, or the Philippine Salt Industry Developmen­t Act, on April 1, 2024.

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. on March 11 approved and signed RA No. 11985, or “An Act Strengthen­ing and Revitalizi­ng the Salt Industry in the Philippine­s, Appropriat­ing Funds Therefor.”

The DENR, through its appropriat­e bureaus and its attached agencies, the National Mapping and Resource Informatio­n Authority (NAMRIA) and the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) are mandated to map out, identify and designate public lands, including portions of municipal waters, as salt production areas.

Priority will be given to public lands situated in the provinces identified as suitable for salt production and declared as priority areas for salt production, namely Ilocos Norte, Ilocos Sur, La Union, Pangasinan, Zambales, Bataan, Occidental Mindoro, Oriental Mindoro, Palawan, Marinduque, Quezon Province, Misamis Oriental and Antique.

Public lands located in other regions will also be subsequent­ly mapped out, identified and designated as potential salt production areas within six months from effectivit­y of the law.

The DENR is also mandated to inform the public of the result of the mandatory mapping, identifica­tion, and designatio­n of public lands for salt production to inform interested salt industry investors. It will also provide the Congressio­nal Oversight Committee on Agricultur­e and Fisheries a report on the completion of the mapping, identifica­tion and designatio­n of public lands for salt production.

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