Northwest Panay Conservation Project
Northwest Panay Conservation Project
The Province of Antique is an elongated 155 kilometer stretch along the entire West coast of Panay Island. It is bounded on the East by the mountains of Central Panay and on the West by Cuyo East Pass, an arm of the China Sea. It has 18 municipalities and 590 barangays. Predominantly upland with narrow coastal plain, Antique has a land area of approximately 252,000 hectares, of which only 43,000 hectares are cultivated lowland, 54% have slopes ranging above 30 percent ?lending it to soil erosion, presently a critical problem. Antique is generally rural with an economy based on agricultural and fishery related products. According to the National Statistical Coordination Board per 2007 census, it has a total population of 515,265 with a population growth of 1.19%. However, 43.4% of its population is living in poverty. According to the Food and Nutrition Research Institute (FNRI), Antique is No. 1 malnutrition in Region 6 with a prevalence rate of 12.78% compared to that in the Region which has the prevalence rate of 9.47%. Antique is again No. 2 in malnutrition in the entire Philippines. One of the contributing factors to this dire situation is poverty.
The municipalities of Pandan and Libertad are the northern most town of the Province of Antique. It comprises the Northwest Panay Peninsula, along with two other municipalities of the Province of Aklan. According to the Department of Budget and Management, the Municipality of Libertad is classified as 5th class while Pandan is classified as 4th class municipality with an annual income of P22,360,000.00 and 32,797,000 respectively. These merely show meager income and support from the National government. Libertad has a total population of 14,653, while Pandan has 29,518.
Antique Development Foundation (ADF), for the past 15 years, have been assisting small handicraft producers in these two municipalities. The two municipalities are the major source of handicrafts products of the Province. They utilize bariw palm, abaca fiber, buri palm and other indigenous materials for these handicrafts of mats, bags, placemats, carpets and others. These materials are usually taken from forest lands. The municipality of Libertad declared ?Banigan Festival? ( mat festival)a manifestation of how active mat weaving is in the municipality. Of the nineteen barangays that comprise Libertad, 10 are into mat weaving. Of the 1,616 households in the 10 barangays, 856 are mat/handicraft weavers.
On the other hand, the Pandan handicraft is the only handicraft producers in Antique that continuously supply local and export market. The Sto. Rosario Multi-purpose cooperative alone has 155 weavers, and they get their raw materials from 10 other barangays. The cooperative was able to generate approximately P2.5 Million sales of bariw/abaca/buri made handicraft products.
However, in these two municipalities, no study has been conducted as to the volume and amount of materials consumed and utilized for the industry. However, there is an apparent inadequacy of bariw, buri and abaca as there are many outside buyers coming to the area, which remains unregulated. NO adequate replenishment efforts were made to sustain these raw materials.
On the other hand, the municipality of Pandan is also famous of its ?Bugang River? adjudged as one of the cleanest river in the Philippines. Its water comes from Malumpati watershed, which is also the source of drinking water for the whole municipality. However, due to poaching and extractive activities in the Malumpati Watershed, there is a dramatic decline is water level at the Bugang River, hence eco-tourism activities such as rafting is not possible.
Indeed, the resources in the Antique portion of the peninsula are under threat of over exploitation, severe pressures from extractive activities, widespread poaching, and increasing population. Numerous small-scale logging operations regularly seek out and cut the most valuable hardwood trees remaining in the area. Kaingin is being practiced in all municipalities, and this practice does expand into the primary forests and critical watershed areas. Fuel-wood and charcoal productions are also part of daily life for inhabitants. This manner of farming causes unnecessary destruction of the forest and pollutes the water and soil.Hunting and poaching of critically endangered animals is widespread. The NWPP is rich in mineral deposits of marble, silica, iron, and clay. This makes it a prime target for mining activities, which are detrimental to the environment and the health of the people.

Biodiversity Value
PANAY is the 6thlargest island in the Philippines with a landmass of 12,172 km2. It is bounded by Negros in the South and Mindoro in the north. It is geopolitically divided into 4 provinces namely Aklan, Antique, Capiz and Iloilo. THE NORTHWEST PANAY ? LOW ELEVATION FOREST is among the most important key biodiversity conservation sites in the Philippines. The Northwest Panay Peninsula (NWPP) consists of the Provinces of Aklan and Antique, five municipalities and 22 barangays. It is located in the northwestern section of Panay Island. In the Province of Antique, it comprises the municipality of Libertad with 6 barangays and Pandan also with 6 barangay. Forest in some section of peninsula starts as near as two kilometers from the sea and at the elevation of as low as 200 meters above sea level. The Antique section lies at the end of the elongated stretch of land along the entire west coast of Panay Island. The towns of Pandan and Libertad are hilly and on some parts moderately mountainous. Through a Presidential Proclamation No. 186, a particular portion of about 12,009 hectares inside the Northwest Panay low elevation forests was assigned as a Protected area. The Peninsula is a habitat to 223 bird species of which 31 are endemic and 5 Visayan endemic. Of the 170 Reptiles and amphibians endemic to the Philippines, 63 species can be found in the NWPP. In comparison with the other Philippine forests, the lowland evergreen forest of NWPP is as ecologically and botanically important as some forests studied in other parts of the country. It has a remarkably higher tree density (850 trees/hectares) and total tree basal area (64.66m2/hectares) than other forests, i.e. lowland evergreen forest in Bicol (583 trees/hectares, 59.45m2) and Palawan (588 trees/hectares, 49.9m2). However, its tree density is significantly lower than the submontane forests in Mt Kitanglad, Bukidnon (1028 trees/hectares) but with a total basal area higher than that in Bukidnon (55.4m2/hectares).

General Objective:
To promote and undertake protection, conservation and rehabilitation of the degraded resources in the selected barangays of the Northwest Panay Peninsula through responsive management of resources by local communities towards the improvement of the quality of life of the people.

Specific Objectives:
1. Increase the level of environmental awareness of the communities towards sustainable management of resources
2. To establish community based forest/river protection systems and mechanisms
3. To rehabilitate/restore the decreasing forest resources and minor forest products such as bariw, abaca, rattan, nito or buri through cultural management trainings, nursery development and plantation
4. To develop and implement community based enterprises that would improve the living condition of the communities
5. To continue in the promotion and marketing of products produced by the communities

Expected Output
At the end of the project, the following are the expected output:
1. Increase level of environmental awareness of the local community and other stakeholders, on issues affecting their communities and able to formulate plans that will ensure sustainable management of their resources
2. Restoration and rehabilitation of forest resources through nursery and plantation of trees and minor forest products.
3. Established and operational structures and systems for protection through ?bantay suba? forest monitors/guards
4. Improved product quality and income of handicraft producers with sustainable production system
5. Improved services and income of eco-tourism service providers consequently improving their quality of life
6. An industry study of bariw to determine the extent of its raw materials available, materials consumption and other areas for appropriate legislative and other action.

Planned Actions and Activities:
1. Public awareness (IEC)
-Environmental awareness trainings
- Pista-it-suba
- Pista ng gubat
-IEC materials reproduction and dissemination
- ecology youth tour
- river clean-up
- advocacy and suppoert towards appropriate legislation
- study of bariw industry
2. protection
-orientation meetings
-project presentation to LGUs
- identification of community volunteers
- bantay gubat orgainzation
- trainings on environmental laws
- deputation of bantay suba/gubat
-regular enforcement/monitoring

3. rainforestation development
-nursery establishment for minor forest products
-nursery establishment for indigenous species
-reforestation
-maintenance

4. Institution Building/Livelihood Support
-Basic Updating skills training
-Product Development and Diversification for handicraft producers
-Provision of production fund for environmental friendly enterprises
-Marketing Support through product promotion
 
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Project Snapshot

Grantee:
Antique Development Foundation, Inc.
Country:
Philippines
Area Of Work:
Biodiversity
Grant Amount:
US$ 49,707.00
Co-Financing Cash:
Co-Financing in-Kind:
Project Number:
PHL/SGP/OP4/Y3/RAF/11/28 - ADF
Status:
Satisfactorily Completed
Indicators
Biophysical
Hectares of globally significant biodiversity area protected or sustainably managed by project 10

SGP Country office contact

Mr. Errol Gatumbato (SGP OP7)
Phone:
+63 9451331686
Email:
Ms. Leajim Villanueva (SGP OP7)
Email:
Nelissa Maria "Irish" B. Rocas (SGP OP8)
Email:
Rosemarie Joy Quetula (SGP OP8)
Email:
John Mark Ayap (SGP OP8)
Email:

Address

SGP OP7 Address: Foundation for the Philippine Environment, No 77 Matahimik Street, Teachers' Village, Diliman, Quezon City, Metro Manila, Zip Code 1101.