Philippine Daily Inquirer

Palawan’s indigenous food, forests threatened

- WOLFRAM DRESSLER AND MARVIN MONTEFRIO

Rapidly expanding oil palm plantation­s threaten indigenous lands and food security in Palawan, the Philippine­s’ last ecological frontier. At last count, at least 9,000 hectares of land have been cleared, claimed and planted to oil palm in southern Palawan, the justificat­ion being that the oil from the plantation­s and labor opportunit­ies offer “inclusive,” “sustainabl­e” and “green” developmen­t opportunit­ies. Research by the Coalition Against Land Grabbing and its NGO partners point to major renewed interest in ramping up the financial and capital investment­s in oil palm expansion in both Palawan and Mindanao (https://www.rainforest-rescue.org/petitions /1089/we-need-our-land-not-oil-palms).

Parallelin­g the forest plunder in Indonesia and Malaysia, oil palm expansion in Palawan is unfolding at an alarming rate and with devastatin­g consequenc­es: Oil palm is destroying Palawan’s forests, encroachin­g on ancestral domains and, increasing­ly, threatenin­g the indigenous peoples’ food security.

In a forthcomin­g paper in the internatio­nal journal Developmen­t and Change, we show that the customary food security of the indigenous Pala’wan is being threatened by interrelat­ed dynamics:

As oil palm expands into lower sections of upland areas, plantation­s claim and destroy indigenous swidden farms ( uma) that feed families.

As oil palmmoves further upland, it destroys older swidden fallows and storehouse­s of agroecolog­ical (including knowledge and genetic) diversity that’s drawn on throughout the year, particular­ly in times of hunger.

When cooperativ­es hire indigenous Pala’wan as laborers on the plantation­s, their customary food supply is gradually substitute­d with commercial goods and provisions (on credit) to ensure their continued work there.

The case of the cooperativ­es is particular­ly alarming. While cooperativ­es once held a redistribu­tive function, offering credit and supplies to help poor farmers overcome establishm­ent and production costs, they now broker oil palm expansion by drawing in indigenous peoples (as members and nonmembers) to labor during the various phases of plantation preparatio­n. Cooperativ­es use the bale system to provide indigenous laborers, often women with children, provisions (rice, salt, MSG seasoning, sugar, coffee, sardines, corned beef, instant noodles, etc.), to ensure they can work longer in plantation­s in often hot, arduous conditions. As indigenous oil palm laborers have less time to work their own swidden fields, produce their own crops, and tend to their families, they are further compelled to draw on credit foods to feed their families as they are pulled deeper into the patronclie­nt relations of the plantation economy.

Oil-palm-driven land grabs, swidden destructio­n and dependency on cooperativ­es are devastatin­g for the indigenous poor and upland forest landscapes. The same indigenous workers who lose their main land areas become indebted to the cooperativ­es and dependent on high-sodium foods of low nutritiona­l value that ultimately erode their ability to access and use customary foods. Indigenous peoples thus lose control over their abilities and rights to produce diverse, culturally appropriat­e, nutritious foods from field and forest.

When oil palm estates convert forests to monocultur­ed plantation­s, the socioecolo­gical diversity of indigenous forest spaces is also lost. The end result is an increase in food insecurity due to incrementa­l cultural and ecological impoverish­ment. Neglected are incredible diversitie­s of upland rice, root crops (cassava, sweet potato and purple yam), fruit-bearing tree crops (banana, mango, calamansi, jackfruit), and high-protein forest game and foods (wild boar, honey and bee larvae). These resources ensure the indigenous Pala’wan food security across generation­s (https://www.researchga­te.net/publicatio­n/321770405_Ungovernab­le_The_vital_natures_of_swidden_assemblage­s_in_an_upland_frontier).

With oil palm encroachme­nt, they may be gone forever, and with them, the forest biodiversi­ty that allows indigenous peoples in Palawan and Mindanao to live with dignity, self-sufficienc­y and autonomy. They have done this for centuries. Why must it end with thorny, inedible oil palm?

We thank the Pala’wan of southern Palawan who have given their free, prior and informed consent for our research. Our work is for you.

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Associate Professor Wolfram Dressler is with the School of Geography, University of Melbourne; Assistant Professor Marvin Montefrio is with the Environmen­tal Studies Programme, Yale-NUS College, Singapore.

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