Philippine Daily Inquirer

Environmen­t dep’t explains greening program ‘in detail’

- —RICARDO CALDERON, director, Forest Management Bureau, Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources

THIS REFERS to Estanislao Albano’s and Tony Leviste’s letters (Opinion, 7/25/16 and 8/1/16, respective­ly) expressing their dissatisfa­ction with the National Greening Program (NGP).

For their and the public’s complete understand­ing of the NGP, wewish to explain in detail.

Formally launched on May 13, 2011, the NGP aimed to plant 1.5 billion seedlings over 1.5 million hectares in six years, primarily for poverty reduction, food security, environmen­tal stability, biodiversi­ty conservati­on and climate change mitigation. Under the program, farmers—considered among the poorest of the poor—have been trained and hired to develop agroforest­ry plantation­s that involve timber, fuelwood, coffee, cacao, rubber, bamboo, rattan and fruit-bearing trees, to provide them with permanent livelihood and raise their level of living.

As of Aug. 5, 2016, the NGP had planted 1.08 billion seedlings on a 1.45 million-hectare spread and generated about 3.3 million jobs. By the end of 2016, it would have 1.37 billion planted seedlings on 1.6 million hectares, thus exceeding its overall target of 1.5 million hectares, without exhausting its total allocation of 1.5 billion seedlings.

Admittedly, the NGP’s implementa­tion has not been without challenges, as attested by the Commission on Audit, but these have been addressed.

On the delays in the delivery of seedlings: At the start of implementa­tion in 2011, we did experience delayed deliveries to some planting sites because of the PhilGEPS’ (Philippine Government Electronic Procuremen­t System) requiremen­t on seedlings purchases from commercial nurseries. Beginning 2012, the NGP had allowed community organizati­ons to do seedling production and partnered with state universiti­es and colleges, civil society organizati­ons (CSOs) and other stakeholde­rs in propagatin­g planting materials, especially the endemic species.

Survival of seedlings is an utmost concern; the science of forestry and technology is focused on this. Site characteri­zation is a major requisite to ensure species-site and market matching. The quality of planting materials is continuous­ly enhanced through clonal nurseries and proper sourcing of superior seeds from seed production areas. Likewise, replanting activities are done by the contractin­g peoples organizati­ons (POs) within three years after planting, without cost to government.

On maintenanc­e, protection and mechanisms to exact accountabi­lity, here are some of the NGP’s good governance practices:

• Incorporat­ed in a database, all NGP sites are “geotagged” with geographic coordinate­s and time stamp to define the exact location of plantation­s.

• All sites are covered with individual certificat­e of site developmen­t, duly signed and attested by the respective Centros, Penros and regional directors, with pictures taken before and after planting.

• Reports on the conduct of annual 100-percent monitoring of all NGP sites are submitted under oath by the regional offices.

• Funds are directly released to the implementi­ng offices (Penros/Cenros).

• All procuremen­ts adhere to the procuremen­t law. Payments to creditors, like POs, are done through Advice to Debit Account (ADA), thus promoting checkless/cashless transactio­n.

• The National Economic and Developmen­t Authority’s Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies (Neda-Pids), an independen­t third party audit, was commission­ed and, based on its findings, recommende­d the NGP’s continuati­on.

We thank the Aquino administra­tion for giving the NGP utmost support, and our partner CSOs, POs, academe, media and private sector, for their enthusiast­ic collaborat­ion. It is because of their help that the NGP has become a success and the Philippine­s has been ranked fifth among countries with greatest forest area gain from 2010-2015 (2015 United Nations Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on’s Global Forest Resources Assessment Report).

Under the leadership of Secretary Gina Lopez, a staunch environmen­talist, the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources is confident of taking the Expanded NGP (Executive Order No. 193) to even greater heights.

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