LET’S PLANT MORE MANGROVES, THE GREAT CARBON SINKS
LET’S PLANT MORE MANGROVES, THE GREAT CARBON SINKS
As the saying goes, you can’t have too much of a good thing. And if there is one thing in the Philippines we should never say “enough” about, it is mangroves. In fact, we should be saying, “the more the merrier.”
We are blessed with one of the longest coastlines in the world and—believe it or not—around 35 species of mangroves, one of the highest diversities on the planet. God has given us a natural advantage. The question is: Are we using it?
I have said it before and I will say it again: mangroves are money. And not just money from fisheries and eco-tourism, but now from the global carbon economy—carbon credits and even Debt-for-Nature Swaps (DfNS). If other countries are earning from their mangroves, why shouldn’t we?
A new study by scientists from UP Tacloban confirmed what many of us have long suspected: Philippine mangroves are world-class carbon sinks. The research found that mangroves in Eastern Visayas store an average of 387 tons of carbon per hectare, equivalent to over 1,400 tons of CO₂. These numbers rival—and in many cases surpass—upland forests.
And here’s the real magic: mangroves bury carbon in waterlogged soils where decomposition is so slow that the carbon stays locked away for centuries. That is why these forests are now considered some of the most efficient long-term carbon vaults on Earth.
But mangroves are not just climate solutions—they are national security assets. We’ve seen it in Leyte and Samar: where mangroves stand, storm surges are weaker. Where mangroves were cut, communities paid the price.
And have we forgotten that mangroves are also food security infrastructure? Where mangroves grow, plankton thrive. Where plankton thrive, fish multiply. Simple chain reaction. Simple logic. Yet we continue to undervalue these ecosystems.
So why aren’t we planting more?
Why aren’t we requiring every coastal LGU to establish and expand mangrove belts?
Why aren’t we treating mangroves as green infrastructure the same way we treat sea walls or dikes?
Some LGUs are already doing it well—Las Piñas–Parañaque, Sasmuan in Pampanga, Olango Island in Cebu, Northern Mindanao, Palawan, Davao Oriental. But these are exceptions. Most municipalities still lack clear mangrove zoning, monitoring, or community stewardship.
If the benefits are so obvious—food, protection, carbon revenue, biodiversity, climate resilience—what else are we waiting for?
We should be rolling out a national directive that:
Every coastal LGU must map its mangrove zones,
Restore degraded areas,
Expand existing belts, and
Integrate blue-carbon accounting into their climate plans.
And if any LGU needs help, I repeat what I’ve said before: I can ship you propagules. I’ve done it before, and I’m happy to keep doing it.
The world is turning to nature-based solutions. Mangroves are at the top of that list. The Philippines, blessed as it is, should be leading this movement—not following it.
Imagine earning from fisheries, earning from carbon credits, and earning from Debt-for-Nature Swaps—while strengthening our defenses against typhoons and protecting future generations.
We don’t need to invent anything. We just need to plant—and protect—what nature already gave us.
Mangroves are not just trees. They are shields. They are nurseries. They are carbon banks.
And most of all, they are a gift we cannot afford to waste.
RAMON IKE V. SENERES
www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/07-20-2026
