Philippines, Canada Set To Launch FTA Talks, Target Completion By 2026

Sa ilalim ng planong kasunduan sa kalakalan, hangarin ng Pilipinas at Canada na magbukas ng mas maraming oportunidad sa mga negosyo at magsulong ng patas at matatag na ugnayan sa ekonomiya.

Nearly PHP1 Billion Set For ‘Doktor Para Sa Bayan’ Scholarships In 2026

Halos PHP1 bilyon ang inilaan ng pamahalaan para palakasin ang programang ‘Doktor Para sa Bayan,’ na layuning dagdagan ang mga doktor at health professionals sa mga liblib na komunidad sa buong bansa.

PPA, PCG, MARINA To Ensure Passenger Safety, Convenience

Pinaiigting ng DOTr ang koordinasyon ng PPA, PCG, at MARINA para sa kaligtasan at kaginhawahan ng mga biyahero sa darating na Undas.

500K Tree Seedlings Planted Under Pangasinan’s Green Canopy Program

Nakatanim na ang higit 500,000 punla sa ilalim ng Green Canopy Program ng lalawigan ng Pangasinan, katuwang ang mga boluntaryo at lokal na komunidad sa pagsuporta sa pangangalaga ng kalikasan.

Tacloban Mangrove Park Eyed As Urban Green Space

Ang bagong urban green space sa Tacloban ay inaasahang makatutulong sa pagsugpo ng climate issues habang pinapangalagaan ang likas na yaman sa bayan ng Paraiso.

Tacloban Mangrove Park Eyed As Urban Green Space

2610
2610

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

A nine-hectare mangrove area in the coastal village of Paraiso here is being eyed as urban green space in the bid to boost climate resilience and environmental conservation in the city.

Drawing lessons from the destruction of Super Typhoon Yolanda in 2013, environmental conservation group Pintakasi for Landscape Restoration Inc. has partnered with the Institute for Climate and Sustainable Cities (ICSC), City Environment and Natural Resources Office (CENRO), and City Agriculture Office to conserve the Paraiso Mangrove and Eco-learning Park.

The partnership also tapped State Universities and Colleges in the city to heighten student awareness on the importance of mangrove forest.

“Here at the mangrove park, we invite some youth to experience the ambience of the mangrove and to relate what is the effect and the importance of the mangrove in human living in the nearby communities,” Josephine Agustin, president of Pintakasi Inc., said in an interview Wednesday.

CENRO chief Marito Barillo said the mangroves in the area helped buffer the impact of Yolanda’s storm surge, sparing homes from destruction despite ships being washed ashore.

Survivors of the typhoon have since joined efforts to rehabilitate the mangrove zone, which formally began in 2015.

Their continued commitment helped attract support from organizations to expand the mangrove plantation.

“Because of the commitment of the community to rehabilitate this area, they were able to tie up with an organization to expand the mangrove plantation… This area is highly recommended as urban green space,” Barillo said.

The CENRO official said the park has started generating income to the fisherfolk group managing the site through PHP30 environmental fees collected from each visitor.

The park remains the sole mangrove eco-tourism site in the city, largely because of challenges such as limited availability of public land, widespread private land ownership, and a lack of grassroots initiatives to establish similar conservation areas.

Mangrove forests are home to a large variety of fish, crab, shrimp, and mollusk species. These fisheries form an essential source of food for thousands of coastal communities around the world. The forests also serve as nurseries for many fish species, including coral reef fish, according to World Wide Fund (WWF).

WWF said the dense root systems of mangrove forests trap sediments flowing down rivers and off the land. This helps stabilizes the coastline and prevents erosion from waves and storms. (PNA)