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Mainstreaming Climate
Change Adaptation in Watershed Management and Upland Farming in the
Philippines |
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Being an
archipelagic country composed of 7,000 islands, the Philippines is
highly vulnerable to climate change hazards. The most vulnerable
sectors are upland farmers who rely on rainfall for their supply of
water. Flooding is also a regular threat as a result of tropical
storms compounded by degraded watersheds. To help the local farmers
adapt to climate change, there is a need to generate significant
amount of information on climate change adaptation to watershed
resources and upland farms which can be useful for decision making
by national policy makers and local stakeholders.
The project's overall goal is to promote climate
change adaptation by upland farmers and watershed managers t the
national and local levels in the Philippines. |
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Sponsors: |
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ENFOR, College of Forestry and Natural
Resources, University
of the Philippines Los Baños |
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School of Environmental Sciences and Management (SESAM),
University of the Philippines Los Baños |
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World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF-Philippines) |
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Implementing Agency for ACCCA Project
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United Nations Institute for Training and
Research (START) |
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Co-Executing Agencies |
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System for Analysis, Research and
Training (START) |
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Funding Agency |
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United Nations Institute for Training and
Research |
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Assessment of Land Use Options and Estimation of the Total Economic
Value of and Communities' Opportunity Costs in Mt. Matalingahan
Watershed. |
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The
objectives of the project are the following:
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Review and
assess the optimality of existing and planned land-uses in balancing
development demands with biodiversity protection;
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Facilitate
the updating of municipal land use plans and other relevant plans
encompassed by the projects sites (including the Physical Framework
Plan of SPPA to incorporate changes in ECAN zoning and other derived
plans in pursuit of establishing Mt. Matalingahan Range;
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Assess the
opportunity cost of the communities that will be affected by the
establishment of core zones; and
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Determine
the management costs of protecting critical habitats within the
protected areas.
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Funding Agency |
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Conservation International-Philippines |
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Carbon dioxide and Sequestration in the Mirant Reforestation
Projects in Quezon, Philippines |
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Climate change or the increase of the earth's atmospheric
temperature (global warming) is one of the most pressing issues
today. Greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide
and chlorofluorocarbons absorb thermal radiation emitted by earth's
surface. Thus, rising concentration of greenhouse gases in the
atmosphere could lead to changes in the world's climate. The
consequences of this change are disastrous. For instance, changes in
climatic patterns are predicted to dislocate much of the world's
population.
Among greenhouse gases, carbon dioxide is the most abundant. Forest
ecosystems play an important role in climate change problem because
they can both be sources and sinks of atmospheric carbon dioxide.
They can be managed to assimilate carbon dioxide via photosynthesis
and store carbon in biomass and in soil. Great attention is focused
on tropical forestry to offset carbon emissions due to its cost
effectiveness, high potential rates of carbon uptake, and associated
environmental and social benefits. In the Philippines, studies
conducted by the Environmental Forestry Programme (ENFOR) of UPLB
have shown the potential of various lands uses to store and
sequester carbon. This study is designed to estimate the carbon
storage and sequestration rate of the Carbon Sink Reforestation
Project being implemented by Mirant Philippines in the upland
reforestation site at the Binahaan watershed in Pagbilao and
mangrove amelioration areas in Pagbilao and Padre Burgos, Quezon.
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Funding Agency |
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Mirant Foundation, Inc. |
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Quantifying Nitrous Oxide Emissions from Secondary Forest and tree
plantations of Mt. Makiling Forest Reserve |
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Climate change or more popularly known as global warming is defined
by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) as a change
in climate attributed directly or indirectly to human activity that
alters the composition of the global atmosphere in addition to
natural climate variability observed over the comparable time
periods (IPCC, 1995). This is brought about by the building up of
greenhouse gases in the atmosphere such as carbon dioxide, methane,
nitrous oxides, and chlorofluorocarbons. Greenhouse gases absorb
thermal radiation emitted by the earth's surface thus, rising
concentrations of such gases in the atmosphere leads to global
warming.
The IPCC Third Assessment Report (TAR) states that concentration of
nitrous oxide in the atmosphere has tremendously increased since
1750. Based on estimates, its concentration has increased 46 ppb or
17%. Sources of nitrous oxides include ocean, NH3
oxidation in the atmosphere, forest soils, agricultural soils,
biomass burning, industrial sources, and cattle and feedlots. Of the
mentioned sources, about 61% was contributed by the natural sources
which include the soils of the forest ecosystem.
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Funding Agency
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World Agroforestry Centre-Philippines |
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Itogon Integrated Watershed
Management Project |
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The primary goal of the project is to
develop a strategy to assess the overall implementation of the IIWMP
vis a vis a approved Lower Agno Watershed Comprehensive Management
Plan (LAWCMP) as to its performance and effectiveness as well as to
draw recommendations for the various stakeholders sustainable
implementation. Specifically, the project aims to achieve the
following:
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To develop a clear framework plan for
review of the IIWMP;
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To assess the accomplishment of IIWMP
relative to its objectives and targets;
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To ascertain the extent to which
achievement of the IIWMP's objectives has contributed to the
alleviation of poverty, improvement of forest condition and water
quality and other key environmental and socio-economics impacts;
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To identify strengths and weaknesses of
the implementation of IIWMP; and
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To propose specific measures on how to
remedy imperfections of past implementation phase and ensure the
sustainability of subsequent implemtation of IIWMP.
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Funding Agency |
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Cordillera Autonomous Region-Department
of Environment and Natural Resources (CAR-DENR) |
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