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Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Bamboo forests pushed to fight massive Metro floodings

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Source: Guada Bamboo

The Department of Agriculture (DA) is pushing for collaborations with infrastructure and public works agencies for a program that uses bamboo to fight massive flooding nationwide even as climate experts have been acknowledging the plant’s climate-smart superiority.

DA Undersecretary Deogracias Victor B. Savellano is standing his ground in asserting how bamboo is now globally positioned as a flood-control device. This has been proven effective, and Philippines should similarly adopt best practices and technologies.

“Bamboo’s number one characteristic is it is fast-growing. Second is it fights soil erosion. When it comes to cost-effectiveness, bamboo will be our excellent ally, second to none,” said Savellano.

He stresses Philippines’ thrust toward bamboo propagation is an urgent imperative with the perennial floods, as President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. himself committed to abiding by the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.

Even with its own effort, the Kilusang 5K (Kawayan: Kalikasan, Kabuhayan, Kaunlaran, Kinabukasan) Foundation Inc., Savelleno’s own founded firm, is participating in as much as 26,000 hectares of bamboo planting in the Marikina Watershed. It is a private-public partnership.

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Kilusang 5K piloted since 2021 with 30 hectares of bamboo planting in Karugo and Puray, Montalban. It is a part of the Marikina watershed to whose denudation is blamed in Metro Manila’s destructive flooding. Bamboo plays these important roles in solving flooding—rehabilitation of degraded land, reforestation, carbon sequestration and poverty alleviation.

With some bamboo species growing by more than one meter per day, bamboo must be the fastest growing plant on earth.

Guada Bamboo in Latin America, exporter of giant tropical bamboo, reported that “one hectare of Guada Bamboo forest can store more than 30,000 liters of water in its culms during rainy season, which it gradually deposits back in the soil during dry season.”

It stores large amounts of water in its wide network of rhizomes and stems during the rainy season, and returns water to the soil, rivers and streams during droughts.

The International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) reported that huge amount of carbon is stored in China’s bamboo forests. This is projected to reach to 1.018 billion metric tons (MT) in 2050 from 727 million MT in 2010.

In Kenya where floods and landslides displaced almost 300,000 people in 2018, smallholder farmers planted 65,000 bamboo seedlings in the watershed. Bamboo plants are used to cut sediments’ flow into rivers, repair riparian (river banks) areas, and stabilize lands prone to landslides.

In Sierra Leone where flooding from torrential rains have caused poorest farm communities to suffer more from disasters, a program for a five-year bamboo planting has been raised in order to arrest illegal rural activities that cause flooding, reported Climatecolab.org. Among its environmental destroyers are illegal timber harvesting, mining and the community use of firewood or charcoal for cooking. “Bamboo covers the soil through its canopy, reducing evaporation, hence rehabilitating highly degraded areas faster. Depending on the species, it forms a canopy within the first four years compared to other trees that can take about 15 to 30 years,” reported DW.org, referring to statements of Peter Kung’u of the Kenya Forestry Research Institute.

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