Sun.Star Pampanga

Bamboo becomes tourism, economic advantage for Pampanga town

- BY IAN OCAMPO FLORA Sun.Star Staff Reporter

CITY OF SAN FERNANDO – The preregistr­ation for the Philippine Identifica­tion System (PhilSys) is ongoing in Pampanga following its selection as one of the 32 provinces to pilot the implementa­tion.

Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) Region III Chief Administra­tive Officer Elna Ruth Casasola said preregistr­ation enumerator­s are already deployed to collect the demographi­c informatio­n of the target recipients.

“We started the pre-registrati­on here in Pampanga last October 12, and it is still ongoing. Our staff are gathering the profiles such as name, age, and gender on a house-to-house basis,” she said.

Target pre-registrant­s for PhilSys are heads of low-income households identified in the Listahanan 3 by Department

But what started out as an effort to protect and riverbank and propagate more bamboo species for commercial use turned out be a viable tourism potential for the town.For some six years after the bamboo

of Social Welfare and Developmen­t.

Relative to this, PSA plans to move the date of registrati­on to December 14, after its postponeme­nt last November 25.

“There is a delay in registrati­on because we have to do enhancemen­ts in terms of system integratio­n. We have to have fixed registrati­on centers with identified pre-registrant­s in their respective municipali­ties.

Due to the huge number of those who pre-registered, it is a struggle to sort them in different venues,” she expl ai ned.

PhilSys identifica­tion cards have no expiration dates and can be availed by any person.

“If the person who registered is one propagules were planted, the six hectare property along the riverbank has turned into an eco-tourism destinatio­n.

Now known as the Bamboo Hub and Eco Village, the attraction is located in a six-hectare property in Barangay Sta. Catalina in Lubao town.But unlike other natural eco-parks in the region, the Bamboo Hub is manmade.

The property is managed by the Municipal Government of Lubao and has become a favorite tourism destinatio­n attracting families and health buffs that avail of amenities like covered pathways, bike lanes, and even its own fish spa.But most visitors are attracted to the prospects of leisurely strolls under the forest-like canopy from the hundreds of bamboo clumps the line the eco-park.

The eco-park attracts an average of 600 people on weekends, according to the municipal government.

Some 325 fully-grown clumps of bamboo were planted inside the sixhectare ecological park. Thousands more will be planted inside a 30-hectare village that the municipal government is devel opi ng.

Humble beginnings The area was not initially conceived for ecotourism.The bamboos were planted by the then provincial bamboo council and the municipali­ty in coordinati­on with the Pampanga Chamber of Commerce and Industry (Pamcham) which was also pushing for bamboo propagatio­n and the use of engineered bamboo as an alternativ­e to commercial lumber.

The bamboos were to be used for the unique line of environmen­tfriendly products developed in the nearby Materials Recovery Facility of the town. The town, with the help of the Department of Trade and Industry facilitate­d the training for the engineerin­g of bamboo slots for the creation of bamboo desks.

The facility was also able to make charcoal briquettes with a very high BTU (British Thermal Unit) and these were produced from shredded shavings and waste from the engineered bamboo furniture.

In 2011, the facility was able to give members of the Magalang Bamboo Growers Associatio­n (MBGA) skills and technical knowledge on how to make bamboo slots for furniture and bamboo parquets.

The ultimate objective of the project is a sustainabl­e income for farmers and livelihood for their families and the community, to be achieved by turning bamboo — “the poor man’s timber” — into a cash crop, not only through pole sales but also through nursery raising, plantation and primary processing for bamboobase­d products and for food processing.

Former Pamcham Bamboo Program coordinato­r Myrna Bituin said that the potential of bamboo is limitless.

“Just imagine using bamboo in making furniture and even floor parquets. The engineered bamboos are flat and nodes are removed so that the bamboo can be fashioned as slots,” Bituin said.

Such products, she stressed, are durable and insect-resistant since engineered bamboo-finished products are chemically treated.

UBAO— It all started out as a long-term re sponse to protect a vulnerable riverside of Barangay Sta. Catalina in Lubao town by planting bamboo propagules along the riverbank to prevent soil erosion.

Even today, the Lubao facility has been making bamboo desks. A school desk made of bamboo would cost more than P1, 000 compared to the P700 to P800 for a school desk made of wood.However, desks made of bamboo are sturdier and could last up to five years. Lumber desks can only manage a maximum of two years inside classrooms.

To further promote the wonders and potentials of bamboo, the area where the bamboos were planted was converted into a people’s park and has generated tourists for the town since last year.

The eco-park now has informatio­n posted along its pathways on the importance of bamboo and informatio­n regarding bamboo varieties and their uses.

The facility is so successful that officials of the Philippine Bamboo Industry Developmen­t Council (PBIDC) even toured the bamboo hub to benchmark on the practices adopted by the local government to make use of bamboo for recreation and manufactur­ing.

High hopes for bamboo

The sai d projectrec­ognizes the enormous potential of bamboo not only for constructi­on and furniture, but also for environmen­tal rehabilita­tion, carbon sequestrat­ion, and climate change mitigation.These have been the initial motivation for the propagatio­n of bamboo varieties here but there are also other commercial considerat i ons.

Unknown to people is the fact that the

Philippine­s is the world’s sixth biggest exporter of bamboo products in the world, with a total export value reaching $30 million in 2009.

With the threats of global warming and climate change, and the growing demand for eco-friendly alternativ­e to wood to conserve the world’s remaining forests, internatio­nal market value for commercial bamboo is expected to hit $20 billion.

Owing to its tensile strength, bamboo is considered by forest scientists as a “poor man’s lumber” whose many new products included high-value engineered floor tiles, export furniture and handicraft­s, and musical instrument­s

Commercial species of Kawayan tinik (Bambusa blumeana), Bayog (Bambusa sp.), Kawayan kiling (Bambusa vulgaris) and Giant bamboo (Dendrocala­mus asper) have long been used in the cottage industries of basket weaving, hut-making and furniture making in the provinces in the country.

There are about 1,000 species of bamboo in the world with 49 species growing abundantly in the Philippine­s.

As the world’s fastest growing plant, bamboo can grow up to a meter a day, can reach maturity in five years, and can be harvested once every two years for about 120 years. Bamboo belongs to the graminae family of grass, like rice and corn.

PamCham, in recent years, have been advocating the use of bamboo and its propagatio­n for commercial and environmen­tal purposes. It even once urged local government units to reinforce dikes and river barriers with trees and bamboo. Bamboo is said to be very effective in preventing slope erosion and barrier breach.

Most promoters of bamboo propagatio­n in the region believe that a sustainabl­e bamboo industry will position the Philippine­s as the second largest bamboo producer in the world, next only to China whose current market share is about 50 percent.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines