spot_img
28 C
Philippines
Saturday, November 23, 2024

DENR asked: Where are 1.7-B trees under NGP?

Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph Recto yesterday asked for the whereabouts of the 1.7-billion trees supposedly planted in the 2 million hectares of land funded by P39-billion tree program.

- Advertisement -

Under the proposed 2020 national budget, he said the budget for tree planting would be doubled—from the current P2.6 billion to P5.15 billion.

He noted that the DENR’s National Greening Program is one of the very few programs that will be gifted with almost a 100-percent budget increase.

He also described the budget for health, the Philippine General Hospital and college scholarships are like trees being cut by chainsaws.

“But the one for NGP has assumed the status of a protected species,” he said.

But before the Senate approves it,  he said some throwback is needed. He recalled that from  2011 to 2019, NGP’s total budget is P38.9 billion.

“Think I shall never see a project as large as the one to plant lovely trees,” said Recto.

Out of this money, he said the NGP should have planted 1.807-billion trees in 2.141 million hectares of land over the past nine years ending this December.

“But because  2019 is not yet over, let us just see the planting scoreboard from 2011 to 2018: 1.669 billion of trees planted in 1.998 million hectares of land,” said Recto.

He said the 1.998 million, or 2 million hectares of land reforested represents 1 in 15 hectares of the total land area of the country. 2 million hectares is 32 times Metro Manila’s land area. 2 million hectares is also 4 times the size of Cebu island.

“If NGP is to be believed, ganito na kalawak ang tinamnan nila ng puno.”

After counting the number of trees planted, the Senate leader said it is time for the DENR to show us the forest. He said the carpet of green from sea to shining sea.

“Ilabas na ang NGP map. The proof of the planting is in the photos. Ipakita sa aerial maps, before and after photos, ang resulta ng isang P38.9 billion project.”

Assuming that saplings planted had a mortality rate of 62 percent (which is actual, versus the target 85 percent), the large swaths of successfully reforested lands would still be impressive.

The trees may not have yet reached towering heights but they are no longer green shoots that are hard to see.

In places where survival rate is low, he said the reason for the death of trees should be identified.

“Do we have California-like wildfires? Or death by drowning dahil sa lakas ng ulan? Or did the trees die by mass suicide? Or like climate change, man was responsible?”

Tree planting is a climate change resilience measure. It is a program that aims to boost the forest stock of our country so it can absorb carbon dioxide, while providing livelihood and enriching our biodiversity.

“What we have been shown so far is a forest of newsprint of reports and vouchers of spending on NGP. Show us the actual greenery.”

LATEST NEWS

Popular Articles