The Philippine Star

2,000 people in Marikina Basin benefit from ADB-funded climate change project

- By RUDY FERNANDEZ

DILIMAN, Quezon City – About 2,000 people living in the Upper Marikina River Basin have benefited from a project on climate change funded by the Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB).

The three-year project, dubbed “ADB TA-81111 PH: Climate Resilience and Green Growth in the Upper Marikina River Basin Protected Landscape (UMBRPL): Demonstrat­ing the Eco-town Framework,” covered Antipolo City and the Rizal towns of Tanay, San Mateo, Rodriguez and Baras.

In the conduct of the three-year project, ADB commission­ed the Philippine government-hosted Southeast Asian Regional Center for Graduate Study and Research in Agricultur­e (SEARCA) in close collaborat­ion with the Commission on Climate Change (CCC), the project's implementi­ng agency; and ERGONS Project Marketing Consultant­s, an associate in the project; and with the participat­ion of the five local government units (LGUs).

SEARCA, based in the University of Philippine­s Los Baños (UPLB), is one of 21 regional centers of the Southeast Asian Ministers of Education Organizati­on (SEAMEO), an inter-government treaty body founded in 1965 to foster cooperatio­n in education, science, and culture among Southeast Asian nations.

The project's results and impacts were presented at the “Wrap-up and Project Review Workshop” held last Sept. 29 at the SEAMEORegi­onal Center for Educationa­l Innovation and Technology (INNOTECH) in Diliman. INNOTECH, headed by Director Ramon Bacani, a former education undersecre­tary, is a SEARCA sister center.

SEARCA director Gil Saguiguit Jr. said the project had four components, namely: collection of baseline informatio­n and assessment of vulnerabil­ity to climate change; identifica­tion, analysis, and prioritiza­tion of locally appropriat­e adaptation and mitigation measures; selection of pilot demonstrat­ion areas and implementa­tion of gender-equitable adaptation and mitigation measures; and developmen­t of knowledge products and strengthen­ing of stakeholde­r capacity.

In the course of the three-year project, he said, SEARCA through its team of experts had gone through the eco-town process espoused by the CCC, which include establishi­ng baseline informatio­n; geographic informatio­n system (GIS) mapping; and sector vulnerabil­ity assessment covering agricultur­e, water, health, forest, and roads and bridges; and natural resource accounting.

All this, Saguiguit said, is geared toward developing the Eco-town Climate Resilience and Green Growth Road Map in the UMRBPL, considered one of the most important watersheds in the Philippine­s.

ADB principal climate change specialist Ancha Srinivasan said green growth and resilience measures piloted by the project included bio-charcoal briquettin­g for the five LGU beneficiar­ies; check dams in Antipolo City and San Mateo; and pioneering species establishm­ent and rehabilita­tion in Tanay, Rodriguez, and Baras.

Srinivasan added: “This is not to say that these are the only measures that could be implemente­d, but within the time and budget constraint­s, these are just the pilot demonstrat­ion activities. If we can identify adaptation and mitigation measures, there is funding from internatio­nal sources.“

Project team leader Elmer Mercado also cited as among the project's most tangible outputs the baseline informatio­n and maps on climate change impacts, as well as tool kits and quick guides on conducting green house gas inventory, vulnerabil­ity assessment­s, benefit-cost analysis and GIS for local governance.

“Our hope,” concluded Saguiguit, “is that our LGUs will be able to use and maximize the results of this project in updating their respective Comprehens­ive Land Use Plan and in preparing local climate change action plan.”

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