Organic Agriculture Program of Negros Occidental

According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, organic agriculture is an effective strategy for mitigating climate change by building robust soils that are better adapted to extreme weather conditions associated with climate change.

The Organic Agriculture Program in Negros Occidental started with the Public- Private Initiative in Organic Agriculture which established the organic vegetable farm in the rear of Capitol Building in 2005 and the 15 pilot organic villages. The components of the program include: trainings and Information, education and campaign (IEC); production of organic products (agri and aqua); production of organic fertilizer; promotion and

marketing of organic products; research, development and extension; policy and advocacy; and support services & networking.

The Organic Agriculture Program has numerous accomplishments such as:

• Conversion of almost 15,000 hectares of land to organic agriculture.
• Established laboratory production centers for biological agents in five (5) of the six (6) targeted villages.
• Increased farmers’ average production and income by 25 to 30 percent through provision of inputs and hands-on trainings on different organic farming technologies
• Continuous assistance, collaboration and coordination with specific organized organic commodity groups of small farmers.
• Organized provincial, city, municipal technical committees on organic agriculture in 32 cities & municipalities
• Continuous hands-on trainings of field technicians & farmers on organic farming technologies and capacity building
• Annual celebration of “Negros Island Organic Farmers Festival” to link agri- fairs and fair-trade in the local and national level.
• Trained 1,500 farmers and people’s organizations (POs) and individuals on mushroom culture and production

Through the Organic Agriculture Program the province received numerous awards like the Outstanding Province on Organic Agriculture Program Implementation in 2013 and Regional Organic Agriculture Achievers Award in 2014.


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Organic Agriculture

Organic agriculture promotes an ecologically sound, socially acceptable and economically viable and technically feasible production of food. This is through the reduction of external inputs by avoiding the use of chemical fertilizers, pesticides and pharmaceuticals, while enhancing productivity without destroying the soil and harming farmers, consumers and the environment.

The elements of organic crop production include soil management, crop management or multiple cropping, seeds and planting materials and pest management. Soil management involves composting, application of organic matter and preventing soil erosion. Pest management involves crop rotation, mixed cropping, trap cropping, selective weeding, sanitation, net bagging, net tunnels and use of flowers.

Organic agriculture is more about fairness and respect than it is about parts-per- billion of pesticide residues.


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Urban Gardening

PERFECTO “JOJO” ROM is an urban farmer. He graduated from Xavier University-Ateneo de Cagayan in 2001 with a degree of Bachelor of Science in Agriculture Major in Crop Science through a full scholarship provided by the Xavier Science Foundation from 1997 to 2001. He has visited other countries teaching those willing to listen on the concept of UCG. His work about Urban Farming is known internationally as an efficient way to maximize agriculture in urban places.

The complex problem brought about by environmental degradation includes poverty, hunger, social injustices, and climate change. Urban container gardening is an emerging advocacy to democratize agriculture, address food security and waste management problems for local socio-economic development. The World Bank, in 2014, has accepted UCG as a socially inclusive enterprise for the informal waste sector (JSDF-SWAPP-World Bank 2014).

In recognition of its potential great contribution to food security and environmental protection, the Urban Container Gardening of Mr. Rom in Cagayan de Oro has been given several citations and awards: the Lunhaw Award in 2012 and the 2014 Top Brand Philippine Awards. In 2011, Business Mirror news correspondent Mach Alberto “Bong” Fabe garnered the top prize for the “Best Agriculture Story Award” during the 5th Brightleaf Agriculture Journalism Award when he reported on Mr. Rom’s mission of promoting food sufficiency by involving as many people through urban container gardening.

To conclude his session, he said: “We don’t need to become an environmentalist, a forester or an agriculturist to care and make this planet and its inhabitants healthy. Just make gardening a way of life. Start with a single pot.”


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Organic Agriculture

Thank you for inviting me to participate in this event. I also convey the greetings of Archbishop Antonio Ledesma for the success of this undertaking and in the conduct of an objective social audit process of our concerns about the environment.

When Nina invited me to chair this session, I told her that I am not an expert on organic farming; but Nina said “don’t worry, just give an overview and help facilitate the discussions. There will be a
roomful of experts in attendance who will take care of the rest.” And those experts, my friends, are you. Before we start, may I propose the context of our deliberations today?

First, we are told that about 55 million years ago, in an event known as the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum, a series of extreme global warming released massive carbon dioxide estimated at about 60,000 billion metric tons over thousands of years and it took a period of over 100,000 years to remove the excess from the atmosphere. Mother Earth survived but all or almost all life did not. In other words, whatever happens and whatever we do or not do, Mother Earth will ultimately survive. It is us and those who will come after us who will not. Of course we will do everything we can to spare Mother Earth the pain and injury of our making and will join and lead, if possible, the voices of other developing countries for international solidarity in the right solutions.

However, and this is my second point, as a lay observer of the processes and outcomes of international negotiations on economic and legal issues and now on climate change, I hope that those who went to Paris will not take offense when I say that I do not believe there is much to celebrate yet in the recent Paris talks. And that eventually, short- term national self-interest in a world of gross inequalities in power and wealth, will trump the longer-term general welfare of humanity. And when self-interest is rationalized with self-righteousness, it is even more difficult to overcome as we know from our own underperformance at human development and social change in our country.

Third, I submit that since global warming is a reality that sooner or later will result in dire consequences to the world in the likely event of a failure of international solidarity, as stewards of God’s creation in our part of the world, to carry out that responsibility in the best interests of our own country with the greatest caring for those who cannot protect or defend themselves. That is after all, is what social justice is all about. In that regard, we may have a chance at national solidarity since the rich and the powerful have experienced

the direct effects of climate change in common with the poor and may see national interest as also their own. In other words, by upholding their identity more than their self-interest, who knows, by successfully working together to mitigate and adapt to climate change, we may open the doors to addressing not just its direct effects but the systemic causes that also stand in the way of the radical social change we promised the poor so that we can finally put things right in our country.

It is in this context that I hope we will talk about organic agriculture today. The articulated objectives of organic agriculture are among the deepest concerns of the Green Convergence Coalition and are the standards to which we can hold accountable not just the present and succeeding governments, especially the Department of Agriculture and the NOAB (National Organic Agriculture Board), but also ourselves, namely:

a. Better farm income and sustainable livelihood—Increased farm productivity, reduced expenses on imported farm inputs, better income for farmers, and reduction of poverty in the rural sector;
b. Improved Health—Protected health for farmers, consumers, and the public in general;
c. Environmental Protection—Enhanced soil fertility and farm biodiversity, reduced pollution and destruction of the environment, as well as prevention of further depletion of natural resources;
d. Disaster Risk Reduction and Resilience to Climate Change—Improved resiliency to disaster risks through diversification and less exposure to external inputs; and
e. Social Justice—Meeting the basic material needs and improving standard of living for all, upholding human rights, gender equality, labor standards, and the right to self-determination.

The Secretariat of the NOAB kindly briefed me on the program and I have asked that their powerpoint presentation and some other materials provided me be distributed to all the participants in our workshop today. I hope you got them and were able to familiarize yourselves with the official version of its history, objectives, the budgets since 2010, status of the programs and accomplishments to date, and its challenges, so I don’t have to dwell on these in detail. The new director of the program is also here today and can answer questions later.

I hope that those of you who may have a different appreciation from the official version of the facts, the issues and challenges ahead will share these with us during the deliberations so that we can have a balanced outcome report on this Summit.

After the passage of the law in 2010, the National Academy of Arts and Sciences, being the advisory body for science and technology policies and issues held a Round Table Conference to assess its status in the country. One of the papers1 that came out of this and the follow-up discussions had this to say about the state of organic agriculture in our country today which is a good frame for our discussions:
“Organic agriculture in its present state is still far from its full potential. Given the meager formal support throughout its supply chain, including input

1 How Sustainable Is Organic Agriculture in the Philippines? By Rodel G. Maghirang et al (Trans Nat Acad Sci & Tech (Philippines) Vol 33 (no. 2) ISSN 0115-8848)

supply, production and Research and Development on seeds, nutrient and pest management. Thus, direct comparison of organic agriculture with conventional agriculture does not appear to be valid. Overall, it is well accepted that organic agriculture is sustainable on the ecological aspect but sustainability on the financial and the social/cultural aspects are still being questioned. There is optimistic prognosis for organic agriculture, but the numerous challenges of agronomic, economic and cultural nature must be addressed more substantially. This would require long-term, support for research institutions, a strong extension system and a committed public in sharing with the costs of organic agriculture given its multi- functionality benefitting everyone.”

In the light of this assessment from experts, that is our task today. May I start it off with some preliminary questions to the experts in the room?

First: The target is to develop organic farming to five percent (5%) of our total agricultural lands or roughly 483,450 hectares, of which around 151,000 hectares, as of January 15, 2016, are already in place. If organic agriculture is the future of food security, competitiveness and sustainable agriculture, why is the target so small? Moreover, since the selected sites are primarily rooted in the private initiatives of farmers since the 1980s, the question is: Have these been validated in the light of later knowledge such as on vulnerabilities of the sites to climate change? Water needs of Organic Agriculture (OA)?

Second: Is the model we want to propagate that of small farms selling to their local communities? This is consistent with the findings of the IFAD (International Fund for Agricultural Development) that the future of global food security is some 450 million small farms of less than 2 hectares each in the world. That is also the model of our agrarian reform program with certain admissible permutations like cooperatives to address economic scale considerations.

Third: How important is the expensive 3rd party certification in the domestic market, of which there are only 46 farms and establishments covering 1,212 hectares, since government subsidy is only planned for 3 years?

Fourth: What are the nutritional advantages of organic agriculture and are these sufficient to justify the price differential between organic and non-organic products? Are the prices today of organic products within the reach of the non-farmer poor? Is it possible to put organic products within their reach as factors like regenerated soil and supply chain inputs materialize?

Fifth: Are the organizational and operational challenges that have arisen since 2010 being addressed? Delays in implementing guidelines, issues of continuity and institutional memory (6 heads in 5 years of the Secretariat, 11 out of 12 of its staff are contractual and co-terminus with the president).

Is there convergence with the DENR and the DAR and its 2.7 million farmer beneficiaries of which about half are not in Agrarian Reform Communities (ARCs)? Is there a political commitment at the LGU level and do they have the capable extension workers to carry it out?


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Keynote Address of His Excellency President Benigno Simeon C. Aquino III – by Hon. Ramon P.J. Paje

I am honored to speak on behalf of President Aquino. Allow me to share with you his message for this occasion:

Two years ago at the UN Climate Change Summit in New York, world leaders from across the globe gathered to discuss one of the most pressing challenges of our time. Speaking for our nation—a nation that has felt firsthand the impact of the new normal— we made a call for each nation to do everything they can to address the problem of climate change. Last November, we echoed our stance at the COP21 in Paris, where much of the modern world share the success of reaching a deal that involves concrete actions, such as limiting carbon emissions and investing even more in renewable energy production.

Now, as we open the first Philippine Environment Summit, I believe we must tap into the same spirit of solidarity. I understand that the different organizations present, each has specific concerns: from resolving problems with deforestation and loss of ecosystems, to controlling the toxic effects of mining pollution and GMOs. At the same time, I wish to point out that all of you here are united by a shared goal, which is protecting the only world we have, and making certain that we remain its worthy guardian by promoting biodiversity, renewable energy, eco-waste management, among others. Indeed, more can be achieved when people work together toward a collective goal. This environmental summit brings all these issues together: as we engage more people in discussions that can cut across subsectors, we are creating deeper and more meaningful strategies in conserving the environment.

Seeing all of you here reassures me that we are not alone in pursuing reforms to address climate change. Despite the fact that we have one of the smallest carbon footprints in the world, we as a country are doing our part to protect our resources and our people from ever increasing climate risk.

Policies and legislation are in place to safeguard our environment: First, we have Executive Order No. 26 or the establishment of the National Greening Program, which, seeks to stabilize our ecological systems by planting 1.5 billion trees in around 1.5 million hectares. I am told that, as of the end of last year, we have already reforested 1.3 million hectares, and that we will reach our target by this year.

We also signed EO No. 23, placing a nationwide ban on cutting trees in natural and residual forests when we took office in 2010, a total of 197 illegal logging hotspots were identified. But as of last December, we have brought this number down to 23. The confiscated forest products were later converted to about 150,000 units of furniture for public schools, and were used to repair public school buildings, consequently, a total of 1,549 cases have been filed, which have so far led to 202 convictions for illegal logging.

The NGP and the logging moratorium allowed us to rebuild our forest cover, which is why we need to continue on this path beyond our term. We therefore issued EO No.

193 last year, expanding the coverage of the program to include all remaining unproductive, denuded and degraded forestlands until 2028, with emphasis on our endemic species and biodiversity.

Climate change is a multi-faceted problem, and thus we have revisited our strategies in several sectors to make sure our approach to this issue is holistic. For instance, we are diversifying our energy mix, incentivizing investments in renewable energy, and engaging stakeholders to develop a framework for disaster risk finance and insurance to ease the impact of disasters on vulnerable Filipinos. Furthermore, as much as we focus on mitigation, we also need to begin adapting to the new normal. This is why we have improved our weather forecasting and warning systems, have continued to revisit our disaster response mechanisms, and have pursued the strategy of building back better.

Time and again, we have said: In this effort to act against the threats of climate change, no one is exempted; all must contribute thus I look forward to seeing the fruits of your dialogues and discussions, as you explore more avenues to contribute to our environmental protection and sustainable development. Regardless of the magnitude of our initiatives, I am hopeful that all our efforts can be harmonized, so that we may ensure that we leave behind a world still filled with opportunities- one that we can bequeath to the many generations to come, one that is better than how we found it.

Thank you and good day.


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Prayer from the Indigenous Peoples: Liberty Talastas, Regional Coordinator of Indigenous Green of Cordillera

Lord, help us to maintain a reverend attitude towards nature, threatened from all sides today, in such a way that we may restore it completely to the condition of brother/sister and to its role of usefulness to all humankind for the glory of God the Creator.

May the waters flow peacefully; May the herbs and plants grow peacefully; May all the divine powers bring unto us peace. May the rain come down in the proper time; May the earth yield plenty of crops; May the country be free from war; The supreme Lord is peace.

Through the silence of nature I attain Thy divine peace. Oh sublime nature, in thy stillness let my heart rest. Thou art patiently awaiting the moment to manifest through the silence of sublime nature. Oh nature sublime, speak to me through silence for I am awaiting in silence like you the call of God. Oh nature sublime, through thy silence I hear thy cry. My heart is tuned to the quietness that the stillness of nature inspires.

O God, enlarge within us the sense of fellowship with all living things, our brothers, the animals to whom you have given the earth as their home in common with us.

Peace to all!

Muslim Prayer: Alim Hamdi Mulok Barodi, Sariah Law of Madrasal Al-Hikma

Praise belongs to Allah who created the heavens and the earth and appointed darkness and light…

Allah is the Light of the heavens and the earth. Light upon Light. Allah guides to His Light whoever He wills and Allah makes metaphors for mankind and Allah has knowledge of all things.

It is Allah who created the heavens with no support; It is He who sends out the winds, bringing advance news of His mercy, so that when the heavy clouds have been lifted up, Allah dispatch them to a dead land and send down water to it, by means of which Allah bring forth all kinds of fruit. When He makes it fall on those of His servants He wills, they rejoice; it is Allah who sends down water in due measure from the sky that bring a dead land back to life.

Glory be to Him who created all the pairs: from what the earth produces and from themselves and from things unknown to them. It is He who made the earth a cradle for you and threaded pathways for you through it and sent down water from the sky by which diverse pairs of plants are brought forth.

Allah, there is no god but Him, the Living, the Self-Sustaining. He is not subject to drowsiness or sleep. Everything in the heavens and the earth belongs to Him. Who can intercede with Him except by His permission? He knows what is before them and what is behind them but they cannot grasp any of His knowledge save what He wills. His footstool encompasses the heavens and the earth and their preservation does not tire Him.

He has let loose the two seas, converging together, with a barrier between them they do not break through.

Allah is the Originator of the heavens and earth. When He decides on something, He just says to it, “Be!” and it is. Only in the remembrance of Allah can the heart find peace.”

Anyone who acts rightly, male or female, being a believer, Allah will give them a good life and they will be recompensed according to the best of what they did.

Catholic Prayer : Fr. Pete Montallana, President of Save Sierra Madre Network

Sa ngalan ng Ama, ng Diyos at ng Espirito Santo. Mapagmahal na Ama, di namin masukat ang iyong pagmamahal sa buong sangnilikha. Magmula sa mga damo hanggang sa napaka-komplikadong katawan ng mga may buhay. Nakakamangha ang iyong mga ginawa. Salamat din sa Pilipinas na para bagang mga perlas na mudmud mo sa dagat, Mayaman sa isda, punong-puno ng biodiversity ang kabundukan at kinakainggitan ang mga mineral sa ilalim ng lupa.

Nakakalungkot lamang mahal na Ama, na sa gitna ng kayamanan na regalo mo naranasan at nararanasan namin ang malagim ng kasaysayan na bunga ng pag-aangkin ng Inang Kalikasan na naging dahilan na rin ng walang habas na pagkasira ng kalikasan. Gutom ang nararanasan ng nakakaraming Pilipino sa gitna ng nauubos na kalikasan ang dapat na para sa lahat ay naging swimming pool ng iilan.

Ganoon pa man ay pinadala mo ang tagapag-ligtas na si Hesus sa pamamagitan ni Pope Francis na siyang naghamon na ayusin namin ang mga balangkas ng kawalan ng pagkaka-pantay-pantay sa matinding panganib ng global warming. Pinapukaw niya ang diwa ng pagka-habag at katarungan para sa mga dukha at para sa kalikasan. Lahat po kami ay nagkasala, sa direktang maka-sariling paggamit ng kalikasan at kahit na global warming na ngayon, di nakikisangkot kaya’t business as usual pa ang ugali namin.

Pasiglahin ninyo po kami ng Espiritu ni Hesus, sa amin na buong tapang na nawagan ng pagbabalik loob sa Kanya. Ecological conversion ang susi sa kinabukasan. Nawa’y patuloy mo kaming liwanagan, maging mapagtuklas ng mga alternatibong pamamaraan para makumpuni ang nasisirang kalikasan.

Nawa’y patapangin kami ng krus ni Hesus na huwag aatras sa pagtatanggol ng kalikasan. Nawa’y pagkalooban kami ng pag-asa na sa Kanyang muling pagkabuhay, magtatagumpay ang Dyos sa kasakiman at kasinungalingan, sa kapangyarihan ng mahal na Ama. Makakayanan naming talikuran ang kasalanan at iaalay namin ang aming sarili sa pagtatayo ng bagong langit at bagong lupa. Amen.

1st Philippine Environment Summit February 9, 2016

A press conference was held on the first day of the 1st Philippine Environment Summit (February 9, 2016) in one of the meeting rooms at SMX Convention Center, the summit venue. In the panel were: Dr. Angelina P. Galang, President of Green Convergence, which was the organizer of the Summit; Sec. Ramon J.P. Paje of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources; and Dr. David Suzuki, renowned geneticist and author from Canada, one of the main plenary speakers.

The press conference aimed to formally brief the media covering the Summit program as a whole, to highlight the key environmental issues and speakers featured, and to share other salient information on the program. The journalists were mostly from the press corps of DENR and Philippine Information Agency.

As it was held immediately after the opening ceremonies and plenary session, the first speaker, Dr. Galang, stressed in her speech the issue of safe food which was the day’s focus in both the plenary session and the breakout sessions in the afternoon. Thus, the questions from the press were largely on food, mainly the popular issues of organic food and the “stigma” of its high cost, and about genetically modified organisms (GMOs), the scientific explanation and arguments against it.

Salient points from the speakers’ remarks:

Dr. Galang: Safe food rules out genetically modified organisms (GMOs) and embraces natural, organic food. There are two recent developments in the Philippines opposed to GMOs – the Supreme Court ruling not allowing the use of GMOs in food production, and the new Administrative Order being consulted with civil society which is seen to encompass safe food production. She adds that as there are no definite proofs yet on the dangers of GMOs despite views of many independent scientists, we can follow the Precautionary Principle of exercising caution when not sure. She endorses organic food for those willing to pay the cost of eating healthy, as well as ordinary and readily available vegetables like malunggay and alugbati for all.

Sec. Paje: There must be caution in the use of GMO in food production, invoking the Precautionary Principle. He also explains that the use of chemical enhancers is a response to a need to increase food supply for an increasing population, a concern of the Department of Agriculture. On the other hand, organic food is indeed safe but still costly so that it is a challenge to produce safe food that can be enjoyed by many.

Dr. Suzuki: He asserts that GMO is a technology that we still don’t know much. It didn’t exist before so we can’t accurately anticipate results as yet. Nature is best, is an underlying, simple message of his in the discussion on GMOs when provoked to explain genetic engineering as in the recent developments on the stem cell.

As a summing up of the press conference, Sec. Paje found the Philippine Environment Summit a good avenue for government and civil society to consult with each other for better implementation of environmental programs.

Mongo Industry in the Philippines

VICE MAYOR ROBERTO C. AGCAOILI is the Vice Mayor and three-time mayor of San Mateo municipality of Isabela. Under his leadership, it has garnered awards in agricultural development, solid waste management and governance. The Galing Pook Award of 2007 for “Munggo: The Black Gold of San Mateo” is a proof of his administration’s thrust of addressing malnutrition problems, alleviating poverty, developing agriculture and creates additional jobs that provide additional income for the farmers.

Monggo (Vigna radiata) also known as mung bean can provide a lot of benefits to health, the environment and socioeconomics. In its 2012 issue, Readers’ Digest cited it as one of the five (5) foods that can save the world. Being rich in protein, it is called the “poor man’s meat”. The nitrogen fixing bacteria in its roots can help restore the fertility of the soil thus it is great as rotational crop. Because it has a lot of uses, it is very marketable and demands high price so it can give the farmers a sustainable livelihood.

With the objective of restoring the fertility of the soil which was once depleted due to the mono-cropping practice, the local government of San Mateo, Isabela under the leadership of Mayor Agcaoili has introduced modified cropping pattern and used munggo as rotational crop. To encourage the farmers to plant, they implemented the “plant now, pay later” scheme in which the LGU allocated 20 kilos of munggo seeds to farmers which is payable also with munggo after their harvest.

As a result, 7000 hectares of farmland is now devoted to munggo. Three hundred fifteen thousand (315,000) employment for harvesters have been generated with an income of Php P91,462,000.00 at PhP 290.00 per harvester. Return of investment is
reported to be 132.66%. Its success has earned them the title “The Munggo Capital of the Philippines” as declared by the Department of Agriculture through Administrative Order No 23, Series of 2011 and the “Galing Pook Award” in 2007. To celebrate their success and to showcase the different products derived from it, “Balatong Festival” is being held annually. ‘Balatong” is an Ilocano term for munggo.


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