The Philippine Star

Palawan new boom town for ecotourism through UNDP

- By RAINIER ALLAN RONDA

PUERTO PRINCESA CITY – People’s organizati­ons tapped to conserve protected forest and marine resource areas in Palawan’s provincial capital are set to become sustainabl­e ecotourism enterprise­s with a little help from the United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP).

With wealth creation provided by their ecotourism ventures, these organizati­ons that hold community-based forest management agreements and marine protected areas are expected to become stronger and more sustainabl­e, increasing their capacity to guard forests, marine areas and natural parks.

The Small Grants Program 5 (SGP 5) is a showcase of how the UNDP, joining forces with the government through the Department of Environmen­t and Natural ResourcesB­iodiversit­y Management Bureau, and non-government organizati­ons like the Palawan Conservati­on Corps and the Palawan Center for Appropriat­e Technology Inc. (PCART) as well as communitie­s can enable these people’s organizati­ons into becoming tourism entreprene­urs.

Ola Almgren, UNDP resident representa­tive and coordinato­r, after a recent tour of several grantees and ongoing projects of the SGP 5 in Puerto Princesa City, said the earnestnes­s of the community organizati­ons was encouragin­g as well as inspiring.

“We are very encouraged and inspired by the progress of these community-based initiative­s in making the natural beauty of Palawan more accessible to visitors while safeguardi­ng its unique ecosystems and biodiversi­ty,” Almgren said.

Almgren said that the SGP 5 was living up to its being a catalyst for government agencies and local government units to provide more investment­s in community organizati­ons upon seeing the potential of the startup ecotourism ventures.

“UNDP’s support to these communitie­s goes beyond the funding. We are very pleased to see how our relatively small grants to the communitie­s are catalytic, not only to ensuring that the environmen­t is conserved and protected, but also to paving the way for bigger efforts to spur developmen­t in these areas,” Almgren said.

A showcase among the SGP 5 projects in Palawan is that of PCART for the protection of mangrove areas along the Barbacan River, spanning seven barangays in the municipali­ty of Roxas.

About half of the SGP 5 grant of P2.05 million was put into the constructi­on of a new monitoring station replacing the decrepit old one at the mouth of the Barbacan River. The station guards stand watch at night against poachers from nearby Green Island as seaweed farmers are known to cut down mangrove trees for their seaweed pens and poles. Lawrence Padilla, PCART executive director, said that community folks, mostly women the NGO was working with for the constructi­on of the station, had seen the potential of opening a restaurant at the monitoring station, as well as a nighttime firefly tour along the river. Padilla said that they saw no problem drawing customers to the firefly tour and restaurant, since there was a stream of tourists at two highend resorts across Green Island Bay and Tambobong Bay at the mouth of the Barbacan – the Calixi and Modessa. The proposed projects, he said, have gotten the support of the local government of Roxas, which had committed funds for the constructi­on of a mangrove walk beside the monitoring station. The Palawan provincial government has committed funds to buy three kayaks and three boats so PCART can offer waterspout activities. The SGP 5 has 18 other ongoing projects in the whole of Palawan, the province being one of three priority areas in the Philippine­s.

Grace Tena, program analyst of UNDP Philippine­s’ Inclusive and Sustainabl­e Unit, said that the two other priority areas are Samar and the Sierra Madre range.

“The reason for the selection of these sites was that these are areas known to have very rich biodiversi­ty,” Tena said.

The SGP heavily engaged NGOs and communitie­s living around protected areas, she said. Funded by the Global Environmen­t Facility (GEF), the projects are focused on biodiversi­ty.

“We want to showcase in this project that global environmen­tal benefits can be achieved through community initiative­s. That’s the main objective of SGP 5,” Tena said.

“We have approved 19 projects in Sierra Madre, in Palawan 19, Samar 13 – so overall we have 51 small grants projects in these areas,” she said.

The GEF unites 183 countries in partnershi­p with internatio­nal institutio­ns, civil society organizati­ons and the private sector to address global environmen­tal issues while supporting national sustainabl­e developmen­t initiative­s.

The facility was establishe­d in October 1991 as a $1-billion pilot program in the World Bank to assist in the protection of the environmen­t and promote sustainabl­e developmen­t.

 ?? UNDP, RAINIER ALLAN RONDA ?? Photo shows the station built by a non-government organizati­on at the mouth of the Barbacan River in Barangay San Nicolas, Roxas town in Palawan, which is set to be transforme­d into a ‘visitor center’ complete with restaurant and nighttime firefly...
UNDP, RAINIER ALLAN RONDA Photo shows the station built by a non-government organizati­on at the mouth of the Barbacan River in Barangay San Nicolas, Roxas town in Palawan, which is set to be transforme­d into a ‘visitor center’ complete with restaurant and nighttime firefly...
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