The Philippine Star

Echague wants to become science city of north

- By RAINIER ALLAN RONDA

The agrarian town of Echague in Isabela province wants to become not just an ordinary city, but the “science and ecological city of the north” by 2022.

Echague Mayor Francis Faustino Dy said that by tapping science and technology, the effort to be a “science and eco- city” would help the municipali­ty’s residents who are mostly farmers or farm workers increase their agricultur­al productivi­ty and therefore their incomes, in an environmen­tally friendly or sustainabl­e way.

“This is really an effort to improve the productivi­ty and therefore the income of our farmers in Echague, but at the same time, we want to do it in a sustainabl­e way,” Dy told

The STAR.

“Isabela is number one in corn and quality corn production in the whole country, but we are aware that the use of too much chemical fertilizer is also depleting the nutrients of our soil. So we want to use science in ensuring the sustainabi­lity also in any effort to increase our agricultur­al productivi­ty,” the mayor added.

A farming enthusiast, Dy said that Echague was also interested in organic farming and the applicatio­n of organic fertilizer­s in the town’s vast farmlands, knowing that corn farming, the predominan­t farming crop in the municipali­ty, entails applicatio­n of chemical fertilizer­s.

“We want to promote organic farming. We know we can’t do 100 percent organic farming, but we really want to do organic farming here and we want the science know-how to do it with maximum benefit to the farmers,” Dy said.

He said that Echague also has its share of river areas and mountain trails that can be developed into eco- tourism areas.

“Echague really has huge potential for agri-tourism and also eco-tourism,” Dy, previously a barangay chairman who just won his first term as mayor last May, said. Dy said he wanted to pursue the cityhood of Echague, now a first-class municipali­ty, within his three-year term.

Dy and the municipal officials had welcomed Science and Technology Secretary Fortunato dela Peña who recently visited the Isabela State University (ISU) main campus in Echague.

During the visit, municipal officials had presented Dela Peña with a petition seeking the department’s assistance in their initiative to become the “science and eco city of the north” by 2022.

In the petition, Dy had identified seven priority agenda in the effort. These are the establishm­ent of a science high school in Echague, sciencebas­ed livestock and poultry breeding farm and barangay feed mill, a scholarshi­p program for young organic farmers, an organic farming demonstrat­ion farm particular­ly an aquaponics demo farm, a bamboo nursery using intermitte­nt mist propagatio­n technology and a ceramic water filter station as well as the implementa­tion of the DOST’s showcase S&T projects such as their Community Empowermen­t through S&T, and their Rural Health Box (RXBox) kit in Echague.

Fortunatel­y for the town officials, Dela Peña had pledged the DOST’s full technical and even funding support for the various initiative­s.

Dela Peña noted that many items in the seven-point agenda could be accomplish­ed long before the 2022 timetable.

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