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Friday, March 29, 2024

PH nickel industry plants more than 4 million trees

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Going beyond compliance in implementing responsible and sustainable mining operations, key players in the Philippine nickel industry have planted an estimated 4.2 million trees to date in the Caraga region and in Palawan.

PH nickel industry plants more than 4 million trees
PNIA Chairman and President of Marcventures Holdings Inc. (MHI) Isidro C. Alcantara Jr. speaks at the recent Philippine Mining Club luncheon in Makati City.

The Philippine Nickel Industry Association (PNIA), through its seven member-companies, has raised its greening e orts in recent years as part of ongoing progressive rehabilitation and reforestation in their respective mining areas.

“Our member-companies have planted more than we have mined. In fact, our ‘green’ footprint is larger than our mining footprint in terms of area. Our aggregate reforestation e ort comes up to a total of about 2,000 hectares planted to date,” said Charmaine Olea-Capili, PNIA executive director.

She cited a forest density of about 2,100 trees per hectare among its members — which is much higher than the country’s National Greening Program.

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A variety of indigenous and endemic tree and grass species have been successfully planted since the start of rehabilitation e orts. These include Agoho, Mahogany, giant bamboo, Tiger Kamagong, Tiga, Ipil, Narra, and Ironwood, as well as fruit-bearing trees like Calamansi, Rambutan, Cashew, Jackfruit, and Cacao, among others.

Cash crops such as rubber, coffee, vegetables, and herbal plants are also grown in the mine sites’ respective nurseries.

Apart from providing employment to residents and to the indigenous community, the program also allows the companies to help their respective host communities, as seedlings can be donated to the community in support of various greening initiatives.

This has given birth to an emerging downstream industry, agro-forestry, which also focuses on the community’s livelihood beyond mining.

The intensified reforestation program demonstrates PNIA members’ commitment and contributions to the government’s “National Greening Program” or the NGP, which aims to revegetate some 1.2 million hectares of “unproductive, denuded, and degraded” forest land nationwide from 2017-2022.

“Much effort has been poured into rehabilitation because what has been planted will outlast the mine itself. This is for the community and for the generations to come, long after the mines have concluded their operations,” said Capili.

Meanwhile, PNIA is also set to undertake a uni ed e ort to implement a Bamboo Plantation and Livelihood Project.

The unique properties of bamboo complements on-going rehabilitation and reforestation efforts, provides livelihood opportunities and

helps improve community disaster preparedness.

In addition, the PNIA focuses on other environmental preservation initiatives such as wildlife conservation, marine protection, rubber plantations, tilapia production, and other activities that improve the environment.

Organized in 2012 as non-stock non-pro t organization, the PNIA is composed of Platinum Group Metals Corporation, CTP Construction and Mining Corporation, Citinickel Mines and Development Corporation, Carascal  Nickel Corporation, DMCI Mining Corporation, Marcventures Mining and Development Corporation, and TVIRD’s Agata Mining Ventures Incorporated.

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