Archive for the 'Fisheries and Environment' Category

MEDIA BULLETIN-Food Crisis Campaign

Mayette October 30th, 2008

27 October 2008

PHILIPPINES: ‘Women Take the Brunt of Climate Change
By Prime Sarmiento

MANILA, Oct 24 (IPS)

Filipina farmer Trinidad Domingo views the coming
rice harvest season with trepidation. A typhoon destroyed much of her crop
and Domingo estimates that her two-hectare plot will produce less than the
usual 200 sacks of rice.
Typhoons are a part of life for most Filipino farmers but they know how to
minimise losses brought on by heavy rains. Domingo starts tilling rice as
early as June and July — the start of the wet season. By planting early,
she can avoid most rain damage.
But this year, Domingo could only start planting in August as the wet
season started late.
“This is really a problem for me as I invested a lot of money, about PhP
60,000 (roughly 1,250 US dollars), for this cropping season. I may not be
able to repay my loan and my family may really need to tighten belts,’’ she
said. Domingo heads an extended family that includes siblings and numerous
nephews.

Continue Reading »

Climate and Women in Fisheries

Mayette October 29th, 2008

Marita P. Rodriguez

Program Development Officer

Center for Empowerment and Resource Development, Inc. (CERD)  

Paper presented to the Third Global Congress of Women in Politics and Governance, Oct. 19-22, 2008 at Dusit Thani Hotel, Manila, Philippines

I.                  The Women in Fisheries and Who Live in the Coastal Communities 

The Philippines, composed of 7,100 islands and islets, is an archipelagic country located in Southeast Asia. Its boundaries are formed by three large bodies of water: on the west and north by the South China Sea; on the east by the Pacific Ocean; and on the south by the Celebes Sea and coastal waters of Borneo. The total land area of the Philippines is 300 thousand square kilometers or 30 million hectares. It constitutes two percent of the total land area of the world and ranks 57th among the 146 countries of the world in terms of physical size. Being archipelagic country fishing is an important source of livelihood for people in the coastal areas. 

Studies by the Center for Empowerment and Resource Development, Inc. (CERD), a non-government organization implementing community-based coastal resource management, shows that 50-90% of fishing activities are done by women[1]. In addition, women also earn income by utilizing the coastal resources. Mangrove areas, by their nature (nearshore) are usually where women go to gather fish, shellfishes, and other marine resources (such as fry). Mangroves were also used as firewood. Particularly in 1 island 76 women out of 86 households are involved in shell gathering. 

Other zones in the coastal areas that women use for their subsistence (food, income, health) are seagrass beds, reef flat areas, and beach areas.  
Continue Reading »

Short Course on Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR)

Mayette October 3rd, 2008

Last week (September 22-26) 5 people from CERD, me included, attended a short course on DRR sponsored by Christian Aid, one of our donor partners. Perhaps the very basic but most important learning we got from this course are the definitions of disaster, risk, hazard, vulnerabilities and capacities:

Disaster: what occurs when the impact of a hazard on a section society (causing death, injury, loss of property or economic lossess) overwhelms that society’s ability to cope. There are requirements for an event to be considered disaster. According to the Center for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters, at least one of the following should be present: 10 or more people killed, 100 reported affeced, there is a call for international assistance and/or a declaration of a state of emergency.

Hazard: a potentially damaging physical event, phenomenon, and/or human activity which may cause loss of life or injury, property damage, social and economic disruption and environmental degradation. It can be natural, human-induced or environmental.
Continue Reading »

“Community Dorf” Knowledge Fair at the 9th Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity (COP 9) in Bonn, Germany from May 15-28, 2008

Mayette June 24th, 2008

This is the poster that CERD represented by Ms. Mariter Quinonez shared in the “Community Dorf” Knowledge Fair at the 9th Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity (COP 9) in Bonn, Germany on May 15-28, 2008.

As many as 6,000 delegates attended the said conference. Aside from party delegation of UN member states, there were also civil society delegation from Indigenous Peoples (IPs), Protected Areas, Sustainable Agriculture Coastal and Marine, Women and others. CERD as a 2006 finalist is part of the Equator Initiative network delegation led by UNDP.

Continue Reading »

Women as Managers of Tago Mahaba

Mayette June 23rd, 2008

Hinatuan, Surigao del Sur
Ladies in Unity with Men Onward to Development (LUMOT-Dev)
(Originally written in Filipino from Women Managed Area – Pamamahala ng Kababaihan ng Pangisdaan, a publication of BUDYONG-Pinagbuklod na Lakas ng Kababaihan sa Pangisdaan (PLKP) with assistance from Oxfam Great Britain) For more information email budyong.women@yahoo.com.ph.

Introduction
The Ladies in Unity with Men Onward to Development (LUMOT-Dev) was formed through CERD in 1996 and registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in 1998. Initially CERD’s plan was to form organizations in barangay proper only, but the women in the island of Sito Mahaba were determined to have their own separate organization in the sitio, since it is difficult for them to frequently travel to the mainland to participate in organizational activities. Hence the Ladies United Movement Onward to Development was formed.

Continue Reading »

Women-Managed Mangroves

Mayette June 23rd, 2008

Calbayog City, Western Samar
Tomaligues Women’s Association

(Originally written in Filipino from Women Managed Area – Pamamahala ng Kababaihan ng Pangisdaan, a publication of BUDYONG-Pinagbuklod na Lakas ng Kababaihan sa Pangisdaan (PLKP) with assistance from Oxfam Great Britain). For more information email budyong.women@yahoo.com.ph.

Introduction
The largest mangrove forests in Calbayog City are located in Barangay Tomaligues, measuring 10 hectares. Most of the residents are dependent in this resource. They collect shells as well as bangus and prawn fry which are sources of income for them.

Continue Reading »

Subsector Study on Siganid by the Kauswagan sa Panginabuhi sa Samar, Inc. (KPSI)

Mayette December 7th, 2007

Â

Located in Northern Samar province, the “Kauswagan sa Panginabuhi sa Samar, Inc.-KPSI” is composed of eight member non-government organizations (NGOs) formed:

  1. 1. To enable the group to effectively interface with the market through the aggregation of livelihoods and enterprise development initiatives.

  1. To strengthen their practice through sharing of experiences and knowledge, most especially on joint concerns such as livelihoods and enterprise development, coastal resource management, participatory governance, and in relating to the market.

  1. To enhance the group’s capability to take collective action vis-à -vis economic and political power centers.

Continue Reading »

CERD was chosen a finalist in the Equator Initiative

Mayette June 20th, 2007

It was March 12, 2007 when we first heard the news - CERD was chosen as one of the finalists in the Equator Initiative Award for 2006, for our work in reducing poverty through the conservation and sustainable use of the biodiversity. And that the final result will be announced sometime in June. It was said:

“After an extensive process of evaluation, the Equator Initiative’s Technical Advisory Committee has selected an exceptional subset of 25 finalist initiatives, from a total pool of 310 nominations from 70 nations.”

Continue Reading »

Did You Know? Facts and Figures About Wastewater

Mayette April 23rd, 2007

Wastewater has been defined as the water discharged from a community after it has been fouled by various uses and containing waste, i.e. liquid or solid matter. It may be a combination of the liquid or water-carried domestic, municipal and industrial wastes, together with such groundwater, surface water, and storm water as may be present.

Population growth, rapid urbanization, and increasing water supply and sanitation provision will all generate increased problems from wastewater pollution.

It has been estimated that the total global volume of wastewater produced in 1995 was in excess of 1,500 km3.

There is the understanding that each litre of wastewater pollutes at least 8 litres of freshwater, so that on this basis some 12,000 km3 of the globe’s water resources is not available for use each year. If this figure keeps pace with population growth, then with an anticipated population of 9 billion by 2050, the world’s water resources would be reduced by some 18,000 km3 annually.

At present, only about a tenth of the domestic wastewater in developing countries is collected and only about a tenth of existing wastewater treatment plants operates reliably and efficiently.

Some of the damages associated with inadequate handling of wastewater are:

- increased direct and indirect costs caused by increased illness and mortality

- higher costs for producing drinking and industrial water, resulting in higher tariffs

- loss of income from fisheries and aquaculture

- poor water quality, which deters tourists, immediately lowering income from tourism

- loss of valuable biodiversity

- loss in real estate values, when the quality of the surroundings deteriorates: especially important for slum dwellers where housing is the primary asset

Untreated sewage affects over 70% of coral reefs, precious habitats are disappearing and biodiversity is decreasing, fishing and agriculture potential are being lost, while poor water quality is reducing income from tourism and the value of real estate.

The global burden of human disease caused by sewage pollution of coastal waters has been estimated at 4 million lost person-years annually.

In March 2003, the World Panel on Financing Water Infrastructure estimated that US$56 billion was needed annually for wastewater treatment in order to achieve the target on sanitation.

In the State of Mexico (Mexico), wastewater is generated approximately at the rate of 30 m3 per second (m3/s), about 19% of which is directly discharged without any kind of treatment.

Information from the International Glossary of Hydrology, the 1st United Nations World Water Development Report: ‘Water for People, Water for Life’ the 2nd United Nations World Water Development Report: ‘Water, a shared responsibility’ and from the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Magazine ‘Our Planet’

The Prospect of a World Without Sushi Bars

Mayette March 27th, 2007

This was shared to CERD through the NFR, everyone is invited to share their thoughts.

None for the Philippines alone, except they should write the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) to release their own catch data and sales data. Worldwide, the following:

From: howieseverino@yahoo.com

Where the Tuna Roam

By John Tierney

Contrary to what you may have heard, humanity will not run out of seafood in your lifetime or anyone else’s. But as false alarms go, this is a useful one.

The world without sushi bars or the prospect of Charlie the tuna comes from the new issue of Science, which contains a graph projecting the collapse of all of the planet’s fisheries by 2048-a wonderfully precise-sounding prediction that has approximately zero chance of coming true. Yet the researchers are right about fish being in trouble. Charlie is like the buffalo that once roamed the West.

If 19th-century researchers had kept tabs on buffalo hunts, they could have drawn a similar graph of doom. And if they wanted their study to make front-page headlines, they could have warned that overhunting doomed future inhabitants of the Great Plains to live in a world without fresh meat.

Today that sounds silly. You can get all the beef-or buffalo meat- you want from Western ranchers. But to the first settlers, the Great Plains posed the same problem as the oceans today: it was a vast, open area where there seemed to be no way to protect the animals against relentless human predators. Unlike in the East, the settlers couldn’t build fences around herds of cattle because there wasn’t wood available on the treeless prairies.

But animals thrived in the West once the settlers divvied up the land and ingeniously devised new ways to protect their livestock. They hired cowboys and worked out a system of branding cattle to distinguish their won at roundup time (and also compensate one another when a rancher’s cattle grazed on another’s grass). Then in the 1870s came a technological innovation: barbed wire, which turned the Great Plains from an open range into a patchwork of enclosed ranches.

Today the ocean is still pretty much an open range, and the fish are suffering the consequences.

In theory, governments are supposed to protect fisheries for future generations by limiting the annual catch; in practice; politicians are loath to impose limits that will hurt the fishing industry before the next election.

Like the old buffalo hunters, fishermen have a personal incentive to make as much as they can this year, even if they’re destroying their own profession in the process. They figure any fish they don’t take will just be taken by someone else. As a result of their short-term thinking, fisheries around the world have been devastated.

But the situation is far from hopeless. Many American fish stocks are thriving, as Cornelia Dean reported in The TImes. A quiet revolution has occurred in certain American waters, like the halibut fishery of Alaska, and in countries like Canda, Iceland, New Zealand and Australia. Fishermen have discovered the same tool used by settlers on the Great Plains: property rights.

These fishermen haven’t figured out how to brand their animals or fence the ocean. But they’ve essentially divvied up the animals just as cattlemen once did. They no longer let anyone without a boat tush out to catch as many fish as he can. Each fishermen has to buy what’s called a transferable quota, giving him the right to a certain percentage of the annual catch. The quotas are bought and sold on the open market like shares of stock.

Once they’ve made these investments, the fishermen start thinking long term. They want to get good prices when they retire and sell their quotas, and they know prices will depend on how healthy the fishery is. So instead of competing to overfish, instead of fighting with regulators and scientists, they make sure that sensible limits are set on the overall catch so that there are plenty of fish left to breed.

When fishermen see the results of this system- more fish in the ocean each year, more money in their bank accounts- they become devout stewards of the environment. The problem is persuading them to adopt the system in the first place. In most places they’re so used to the idea of the ocean as a range open to anyone that they resist having to but their way into it.

If this week’s scare story changes their minds, it’ll do some good. But one way or another, the fishermen will be smart enough to avert the Tunageddon of 2048. This range will be fenced off long before then.

Check out Howie’s blog: http://www.gmapinoytv.com/sidetrip/blog

Next »