Saturday, June 20, 2026

LET’S BUILD WATER IMPOUNDING PONDS FOR FLOOD CONTROL, IRRIGATION AND AQUACULTURE

 LET’S BUILD WATER IMPOUNDING PONDS FOR FLOOD CONTROL, IRRIGATION AND AQUACULTURE

Imagine if every barangay had a modest pond that performs three vital jobs at once: catching excess rain during typhoons, storing water for crops in the dry season, and raising fish for food and livelihood. With proper filtration, that same pond could even supply potable water. With the right design, vegetables could be grown around the perimeter—or even on floating rafts. If this “three-in-one” solution is so obvious, why are we not doing it?

A “small water-impounding system” is simply an earth-filled structure built across a narrow depression to harvest rainfall and runoff. In short: we don’t need mega-dams; we need smart, community-scale ponds. Fed by rainwater collection and natural runoff, these ponds can catch sudden surges of water (flood control), store it (irrigation), and support fish (aquaculture). Install basic filtration—sand and gravel filters, UV treatment—and the water becomes potable.

Around the pond, we can plant leafy greens, fruit trees, bamboo, or use floating gardens. Add ducks, and you add a natural loop of pest control, fertilizer, and an extra livelihood source. Integrated aquaculture systems around the world already combine fish, vegetables, and ducks under one productive cycle.

So why isn’t the Philippines doing this widely? Institutional fragmentation, lack of a binding national mandate, limited technical capacity at the barangay level, land-use constraints, and the usual bureaucratic silos. Interestingly, there is a proposed national measure: House Bill No. 8833, filed by Rep. Teodorico “Nonong” Haresco Jr. It would require all cities and municipalities to build water-impounding facilities for flood control, potable water, and irrigation. A good step—but still a proposal.

Existing laws already make this possible. Presidential Decree 1067 (the Water Code) affirms state responsibility over water resources. The Local Government Code (RA 7160) empowers LGUs to build infrastructure for public welfare, which can include water-impounding ponds. The legal basis is there; what’s missing is coordination, urgency, and a unified push.

Which agencies should work together? Many:
DILG, to guide and mobilize LGUs.
DENR, for environmental clearances and watershed protection.
NIA, for irrigation and engineering support.
DOST, for filtration and monitoring technologies.
BFAR, for aquaculture planning.
DPWH, for structural and spillway design.
DA, for crop integration and food-security programs.
NWRB, for water rights and regulation.
CCC and NDRRMC, for climate adaptation and disaster-risk reduction.

Could cooperatives be empowered through the CDA? Absolutely. Cooperatives could manage and maintain these ponds, run aquaculture operations, produce vegetables, and distribute both water and food. This is community-based resilience in its purest form.

Do we have real examples? Yes. The Philippines already has the Small Water Impounding System (SWIS) standard, and the Bureau of Soils and Water Management has long implemented the Small Water Impounding Project (SWIP). Even the Candaba Swamp in Pampanga—though a natural wetland—demonstrates how seasonal water retention can double as agricultural land in the dry months. We are not starting from zero.

My view is simple: this is a low-hanging solution with high-impact results. Flood control, irrigation, aquaculture, potable water, vegetables, ducks—one pond, many benefits. It aligns perfectly with climate resilience, food security, and rural livelihood development.

My suggestions:

  1. Pilot 2–3 barangays in flood-prone or water-scarce areas.

  2. Form a multi-agency steering group with LGUs and cooperatives.

  3. Develop a design manual: sizing, runoff calculations, filtration units, aquaculture species, vegetable and duck integration.

  4. Set clear monitoring metrics: water level, quality, productivity, maintenance, community use.

  5. Scale up through HB 8833 or LGU ordinances and proper budgeting.

Why isn’t this already widespread? Cost? Capacity? Land tenure? Or simply lack of imagination? Whatever the reason, we cannot afford to waste water—or opportunities—any longer. Water is not just a threat during floods; it is an asset when stored, managed, and shared.

The tools exist. The urgency is real. Let’s build these ponds.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/06-21-2026


Friday, June 19, 2026

IS IT POSSIBLE TO ACHIEVE FOOD SUFFICIENCY AT THE BARANGAY LEVEL?

IS IT POSSIBLE TO ACHIEVE FOOD SUFFICIENCY AT THE BARANGAY LEVEL?

Yes — achieving food sufficiency at the barangay level is absolutely possible. But it requires integrated planning, localized infrastructure, and strong community participation. By “food sufficiency,” I mean a barangay is able to meet its basic food needs without importing from other villages — not just rice, but all staples, fish, poultry, livestock, garden produce.


Why this vision matters

Many barangays struggle under food-poverty. For example, in Batangas province some barangays recorded food poverty rates above 90 % — meaning nine out of ten households lacked sufficient income to satisfy basic nutritional requirements. Local programs now show that small-scale agriculture, aquaculture and diversification can change that.
If a barangay can produce its own staples, vegetables, fish, poultry, and small livestock, then it can buffer against rising import costs, supply chain disruption, and climate shocks.


What must a barangay produce?

It’s not only rice. To achieve sufficiency, a barangay should consider:

  • Root-crops and tubers: cassava, sweet potato, taro, breadfruit. The Department of Science and Technology (DOST) notes cassava yields of nearly ₱97,623 per hectare as of 2020. 

  • Non-rice cereals: corn (mais) for human food use.

  • Vegetables: and legumes for micronutrients.

  • Fish: from ponds or inland cages. E.g., an inland aquaculture facility in a mountain barangay produced 7.5 tons of fish, benefiting 294 farmers.

  • Poultry and small livestock: chicken, ducks, goats — manageable at barangay level and provide protein.

  • Upland rice: Yes, even without full irrigation, upland rice varieties (less water-dependent) can still be planted — so rice need not be entirely abandoned if preferred culturally.

  • Innovative substitutes: For the cultural rice dependency, I propose a rice substitute using coconut meat—grated or desiccated, processed into “coco-rice” granules, paired with root crops for nutrition. Coconut meat is high fiber, healthy fats, low carb; it offers an alternate staple to white rice.


How to make it work at barangay level

  1. Localized production & diversification: Backyard gardens, communal farms, agro-forestry, fish ponds or cages. In barangays where the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) provided fingerlings and cages, local fish production rose significantly. 

  2. Infrastructure & post-harvest support: Farm-to-market roads, cold storage, feed supply, hatcheries. BFAR’s regional programs for aquafeeds (e.g., Caraga) show how input costs can drop with local feed production.

  3. Community mobilization & governance: Barangay nutrition councils, cooperatives, youth groups must lead. Ordinances that protect land for food gardens, regulate food waste, and prioritize local sourcing help too.

  4. Data-driven planning: Use data from the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) on local food availability and sufficiency to design interventions.

Here are some actionable ideas:

  • Co-develop a Barangay Food Sufficiency Diagnostic Tool using PSA indicators and barangay-level data.

  • Map “circular food loops”: compost from food waste, seed-saving systems, integration of livestock/poultry with cropping systems.

  • Pilot a modular Barangay Food Hub model: production (farm + fish + livestock), storage/processing, nutrition education, local trade.

  • Engage institutions: Can the DOST, University of the Philippines Los Baños (UPLB), and Department of Agriculture (DA) join this pilot? They have the science, agronomic support and policy links.

  • Introduce non-rice staples: Incorporate squash, yacon, potatoes alongside the root-crops listed; integrate coconut-meat rice substitute experimentation in community kitchens or feeding programs.

  • Define a clear pilot barangay: Choose one barangay with interest + some resources (pond or land). Set goals: by year end, diversify 50% of staple intake from non-rice; establish 1 pond for fish (e.g., tilapia); 20 households raise small livestock; adopt coco-rice experiment.


Final thoughts & questions

Is it possible to have food sufficiency without eating rice? Yes — if the community values nutritional diversity and local adaptability. Rice is culturally central, but not biologically essential for food security. By shifting the narrative from “must grow more rice” to “grow more food that we eat and manage locally,” we unlock potential. Cassava, sweet potato, breadfruit, yacon, squash — these crops can replace or complement rice. According to agricultural indicators, root-crops already constitute a significant supply. Key questions we must address together:

  • Which barangay will we pilot?

  • What infrastructure support is essential (ponds, hatchery, feed, processing)?

  • How will we organize the community, cooperatives, governance?

  • How do we monitor progress: yield per hectare, fish harvests, staple import from other villages, diet diversity?

  • How do we transition acceptance from rice-dependency to richer staple diversity (and the coconut-meat rice substitute)?

In conclusion: Food sufficiency at the barangay level is not a pipe dream — it’s feasible, necessary, and timely. With modular systems, non-rice staples, aquaculture, poultry and livestock, and a collaborative pilot involving DOST, UPLB, DA and barangay stakeholders, we can chart a new path. If you’re ready, let’s design the blueprint and select our first barangay for action.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282.06-20-2026


Thursday, June 18, 2026

RECYCLING AS A MEANS OF LIVELIHOOD

RECYCLING AS A MEANS OF LIVELIHOOD

Recycling is increasingly becoming a viable means of livelihood in the Philippines—especially through community-driven initiatives, social enterprises and LGU-supported programs. It offers income opportunities while promoting environmental stewardship and circular-economy principles.

Here’s the basic change we need to accept: anything that has commercial value is not garbage. If something can be sold, reused or turned into income, it stops being wasted. In that sense, recyclables have value—therefore they are not garbage.

We have already tried our best to promote recycling in the Philippines, yet the level of compliance remains low. Many Filipinos still ask: “What’s in it for me (pakinabang) if I recycle?” Telling someone that recycling is good for the environment no longer suffices. But what if we shift the narrative: “It’s good for your pocket.” What if recycling becomes directly linked to income every time you participate?

That is precisely my idea: create livelihood programs anchored in recycling activities. How do we do it? One strong strategy is to organise cooperatives within barangays or villages. These cooperatives would be given the concessions or rights to operate local Materials Recovery Facilities (MRFs). Managed well, MRFs can generate considerable income: the sale of recyclables, employment for members of the cooperative, and local savings on hauling and dumping costs for the barangay or village. Food waste—even if non-recyclable in the usual sense—can become processed into organic fertilizer for urban farming, which is another project that the cooperatives could undertake for sale or for their own consumption.

How Recycling Supports Livelihoods

  • Community-based waste collectors: Informal waste workers who collect, sort and sell recyclables are increasingly being formalised through LGU and NGO training and cooperative models.

  • Social enterprises: For example, The Plastic Flamingo (aka “THE PLAF”) takes low-value plastics (sachets, wrappers) and up-cycles them into eco-boards used in furniture and construction. This creates dignified jobs. 

  • Up-cycling and micro-entrepreneurship: Women’s groups and artisans repurpose textiles, plastics and metals into bags, décor and accessories. Barangay-level workshops teach these skills for home-based income generation.

  • Materials Recovery Facilities (MRFs): Operated by cooperatives or LGUs, MRFs provide work in sorting, baling and selling recyclables; workers can earn via volume-based incentives and recycling firm partnerships.

  • Eco-tourism and education: Resorts or eco-parks integrate recycling into guest experiences, employing locals as guides and facilitators. Youth-led initiatives promote recycling awareness through school campaigns and community clean-ups.

Enabling Structures
The framework is already there: the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000 (RA 9003) obliges LGUs and other bodies to establish MRFs and promote segregation and recycling. Private-sector partnerships (for example buy-back programs, recycling technology) and international guidance (from the World Bank, WWF Philippines) are also helping promote circular-economy models.

Successful Philippine Recycling Livelihood Projects

  1. The Plastic Flamingo (Metro Manila & nearby): Collects plastics like sachets and wrappers and up-cycles into eco-boards for furniture and construction. Employs locals in sorting, shredding and processing. 

  2. San Jose Sico Landfill Multipurpose Cooperative (Batangas Province): A cooperative turning waste into livelihood—sorting plastics, composting food waste, engaging waste workers, formalising their roles.

  3. (Additional models like sustainable fashion or agro-recycling were mentioned conceptually, but these two already substantiate how recycling = income.)

Opportunities for Expansion
Given your interest in community restoration and circular-design, you could map out barangay-level recycling livelihoods and link them to modular enterprise models. Integrate Indigenous-Peoples led up-cycling using local materials and motifs. Develop donation and tracking protocols for recycled goods in disaster-response or shelter-retrofit contexts.

My Suggestions

  • Organise barangay-cooperatives and give them rights to manage MRFs.

  • Link MRF operations with urban-farming schemes using organic-waste-derived fertiliser.

  • Train local members in sorting, baling and up-cycling so that recycling is not just waste-handling but enterprise.

  • Work with LGUs to reduce hauling/disposal costs and use savings to seed cooperative expansion.

  • Track key metrics: number of workers employed, kilos of recyclables sold, cooperative income, landfill diversion rates.

Questions to Consider

  • How might we structure a concession model for a barangay cooperative to operate an MRF?

  • What start-up capital, training or equipment would be needed?

  • Which barangays are viable initial pilots (given location, waste volume, community interest)?

  • How can we integrate recycling-income streams into existing LGU livelihood programs?

  • How can public awareness shift from “recycle because it’s good” to “recycle because I earn”?

In sum: Recycling in the Philippines is far more than an environmental slogan—it can be a livelihood. The challenge has been raising compliance and changing mindset. Here is a new approach: treat recyclables as income-assets, organize cooperatives, link to real business models. If you have thoughts on how this could be implemented—especially at barangay or cooperative level—let’s explore them together. The time for theory is over: it’s time for execution.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/06-19-2026


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