Sunday, February 08, 2026

LET’S HAVE MORE INDUSTRIAL TREE PLANTATIONS

 LET’S HAVE MORE INDUSTRIAL TREE PLANTATIONS

When we think of reforesting the Philippines, we often imagine communities planting seedlings—kids digging holes, barangays putting their backs into greening hillsides. These are noble images. But noble images alone will not undo the scale of deforestation we've already witnessed. What we need are strategies that match the magnitude of the problem. One such strategy: industrial tree plantations (ITPs).

What are Industrial Tree Plantations (ITPs)?

ITPs are large, managed forest areas—usually on public forest lands—planted with species intended largely for commercial timber, pulp, wood products, or other tree-based products. Under certain conditions, ITPs can also include food trees (coffee, cacao, fruit trees) along with non-timber forest products.

In the Philippine legal framework, Presidential Decree No. 705 (the Revised Forestry Code) provides for industrial tree plantations, tree farms, and agroforestry farms. Under PD 705:

  • Industrial tree plantations require a lease of at least 1,000 hectares for establishment.

  • Tree farms (smaller scale) can start from 100 hectares.

  • The lease is for 25 years renewable for another 25 years, with conditions.

There are also DENR Administrative Orders that regulate ITPs and provide incentives (e.g. rent exemptions, reduced forest charges under certain conditions) and conditions like protection of riverbanks, requirement for diversity, etc. 

Where we are now: NGP & realities

The National Greening Program (NGP) remains the Philippines’ flagship reforestation/restoration initiative. Since its launch in 2011 under Executive Order 26 (and expanded by EO-193 in 2015), NGP aims to plant 1.5 billion trees on 1.5 million hectares, especially on denuded, degraded, and unproductive forest lands. Some achievements:

  • More than 1.8 billion seedlings have been planted on 2.17 million hectares as part of NGP since 2011. Job creation: millions of jobs in upland and rural communities. 

  • Reduction in poverty in some areas where NGP is implemented; environmental benefits like carbon sequestration. 

But the flipside is that the NGP has repeatedly been criticized for focusing too much on quantity of seedlings planted rather than survival, ecological quality, diversity, benefits to communities, tenure security. Some sites are merely “planted” on paper. Some People’s Organizations (POs) still lack secure rights or legal tenure to benefit from what they plant. Monocultures still dominate many sites. 

Why ITPs—if properly managed—could help

Industrial Tree Plantations, used correctly, offer some advantages:

  1. Scale and predictability – With large tracts and long leases, ITPs allow for planning and economies of scale.

  2. Commercial returns – If tree species are chosen for marketability (timber, wood products, even some non-timber woods), ITPs can generate revenues. This profit motive can drive sustainability, maintenance, incentives for better stewardship.

  3. Relieving pressure on natural forests – If industries know they can source from plantations, they may reduce harvesting from native forests.

  4. Potential for export and foreign exchange – Growing exportable timber, wood products, or high-value tree crops can help trade balances.

  5. Opportunity for integration – Combining ITPs with agroforestry, including shade trees, food crops, indigenous species, community co-ownership can add environmental and social benefits.

  6. Indigenous participation – If ancestral domain holders or IP communities are involved, ITPs can support livelihood, culture, and rights.

What should policy or practice look like (my suggestions and questions)

We risk oversimplifying or worse, doing more damage if ITPs are implemented without care. Here are questions and suggestions:

  • Which species should we plant? Fast-growing exotic ones give quicker returns, but native species support biodiversity, watershed health. Maybe a mixed system (some exotics, some natives) is better.

  • How do we protect ecology? ITP leases should have ecological safeguards: protecting riverbanks, watersheds, wildlife corridors; minimum percentages of preserved natural forest inside plantations. (PD 705 and DAO regulations already mention some of this.)

  • How can we guarantee rights for smallholders, indigenous peoples? Secure land tenure is vital. If indigenous communities in CADTs choose to engage in ITPs, they should have incentives, technical support, and fair benefit sharing.

  • What about incentives and finance? Leasing terms, tax breaks, rent exemptions are part of policy. But small players often lack access to capital, technology, and markets. The government or the private sector must facilitate these. Also, loans should be designed to accommodate the long “gestation period” of forest plantations (many years before harvest).

  • Monitoring and survival rates matter. We don’t need just planting; we need trees that survive and grow. Standards, reporting, satellite and GIS monitoring could be ramped up. There needs to be transparency. Civil society can play a role.

  • Comprehensive Land Use Plans (CLUPs) could map all deforested or degraded lands, prioritizing those for ITPs. There must be no double claims, or land conversion that undermines reforestation.

  • Support for agroforestry / combining ITP with food producing trees (coffee, cacao, fruit trees) so communities benefit while forest is regrowing.

My concerns and what we must avoid

  • Monoculture risks: Planting fast-growing exotics only, with little ecological diversity, can lead to loss of soil fertility, more vulnerability to pests, less resilience.

  • Displacement or rights issues: If communities or indigenous people are not properly consulted, or if ancestral domains are ignored, ITP could become a source of social conflict.

  • Perverse incentives: If planting is rewarded regardless of survival or benefit, or if monitoring is weak, then money gets spent without real results.

  • Neglecting non-timber forest values: Watershed protection, biodiversity, carbon, recreation, cultural values might get sacrificed for profit unless regulations enforce balance.

The idea of industrial tree plantations isn’t new. It's embedded already in law (PD 705, DAOs) and there are existing ITPs. But what we need now is not just more plantations, but better plantations—those that serve the environment and the people.

If we are to reverse decades of forest loss, we must scale up, not just in the number of trees planted, but in the scale of engagement, investment, policy coherence, community rights, and commercial viability. Planting a few trees here and there will always be useful—but unless we build full-scale systems that merge environmental care with economic return, our forests will remain in retreat.

I would suggest the government develops a national framework for industrial tree plantations that:

  • identifies priority lands (deforested, degraded) for ITP use;

  • secures the rights and incomes of communities and indigenous peoples;

  • provides financial and technical support especially to smallholders;

  • defines ecological standards and ensures biodiversity;

  • monitors outcomes (survival, wood product output, environmental services) rigorously;

  • links plantations to markets both domestic and export.

With that, ITPs could become not just tools of commercial timber, but engines for forest recovery, economic opportunity, climate mitigation, and rural development.

Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com

09088877282/02-09-2026


Saturday, February 07, 2026

LET US WORK ON MORE GEOGRAPHICAL INDICATION LABELS

LET US WORK ON MORE GEOGRAPHICAL INDICATION LABELS

Recently came news worth celebrating: the Intellectual Property Office of the Philippines (IPOPHL) has approved the registration of Albuquerque Asin Tibuok—the rare, orb-shaped artisanal salt from Albuquerque, Bohol—as a Geographical Indication (GI). This is only the second Filipino product to receive that distinction, after Guimaras Mangoes.

This is a small win—but an important one. It signals that we are finally starting to take seriously the idea that heritage, place, and craft matter in the marketplace and in the narrative of nationhood.

Why this matters

A Geographical Indication is more than a label. It is a legal recognition that a product’s quality, reputation, or characteristics are essentially tied to its place of origin (natural conditions, human processes, tradition). IPOPHL defines GIs to protect against misuse, ensure consumer confidence, and boost local competitiveness. 

In the case of Asin Tibuok, the traditional salt-making process involves filtering seawater through charred coconut husks, boiling brine in clay pots over fire for weeks to months, and forming dense “eggs” of unrefined salt. Because it is laborious, seasonal, and on the brink of extinction, GI status, and the protections and branding that come with it, can be a lifeline. 

Already, IPOPHL is supporting mapping and GI application efforts for Bohol’s Ube Kinampay alongside Asin Tibuok under its Origin-Based Branding Program. But Asin Tibuok may prove more immediately visible, since it is now in the register of official GIs: it is listed on IPOPHL’s “Registered Geographical Indications,” with application number G/4/2023/00005 and registration date July 25, 2025. 

The long road ahead (and where to focus)

One small GI registration is only the start. There are many other Filipino products—foods, crafts, textiles, even spirits—that deserve GI protection, such as binagol, tapuy, basi, bahalina, lambanog, copra, Itneg cloth and more. These are by no means trivial ideas. In fact, IPOPHL itself has flagged 31 heritage products across region, province, and industry for possible intellectual property protection. Among these are Aklan piña cloth, Antique Bagtason loom, Samar Basey banig, Cebu dried mangoes, Batangas Barako coffee, Yakan cloth, and Camiguin lanzones. Still, turning potential into registered GI is no small feat. Here are challenges I foresee (and suggestions):

Challenge

Notes / suggestion

Funding and institutional support

GI registration involves documentation, standards mapping, legal processes, promotional costs. The IPOPHL should have a bigger budget—Congress must act. The recently announced P30.1 million AFD (Agence Française de Développement) project will help identify 10 high-potential GIs and register at least two. 

Institutional lead and coordination

I propose that IPOPHL take the lead by default, with LGUs, Regional Development Councils (RDCs), and DTI stepping in according to scope. That’s logical. For example, if a product is region-wide, RDCs may coordinate; if cross-region, DTI should mediate. We need clear roles, or duplication and turf battles will hamper progress.

Community buy-in and capacity

Many GI candidates are made by small farmers, artisans, and cooperatives. Some are in danger of dying out (e.g. Asin Tibuok salt-makers, ube kinampay farmers). Training, incentives, generational transfer of skills must be integral.


Global protection and market access

It is one thing to achieve national GI registration; another to ensure the GI is respected abroad. GI status helps guard against counterfeiters and misuse of the name in foreign markets—but we must pursue bilateral or multilateral treaties, or registration under protective regimes in target export markets.

We do have models: think Champagne in France, Cognac, Parmigiano-Reggiano in Europe, etc. The Philippines can adapt those lessons to our context.

My reflections, questions, and suggestions

  1. On momentum – Getting Asin Tibuok into the GI registry is a feather in IPOPHL’s cap—but momentum is fragile. We must ensure the next 10 or 20 GI registrations come quickly so that stakeholders see the system works.

  2. On product selection – Which products should we target first? My bets are on those that already enjoy some brand recognition and market niche: Barako coffee, lambanog, Yakan cloth, Camiguin lanzones. These strike a balance of heritage value + commercial viability.

  3. On draft legislation – The Senate already has SB 2387, which seeks to institutionalize support for GIs: protection, development, encouragement. I suggest we push for more enabling legislation—funding, coordination, export support.

  4. On advocacy at LGU level – Your idea that LGUs should actively engage is spot on. Parish, municipal, or provincial governments should map local heritage products, organize producers into associations, and sponsor feasibility studies for GI registration. They can co-finance the documentation, mobilize local funds, and provide counterpart resources.

  5. On a GI “fast track” pipeline – Maybe IPOPHL can institute a fast track for products with high potential or urgency (heritage at risk). Or pilot a “cluster GI” program (several related products in one region) to efficiently build capacity.

  6. On public awareness and market development – GI status must be backed by market education. Consumers must be taught: “this salt is different because of place and method.” Exporters and specialty shop networks must be engaged. Without demand, GI is just a legal plaque.

  7. On monitoring the sustainability of production – As GI products scale, ecological or social pressures may mount (overharvesting, loss of tradition, environmental impact). We should include sustainability safeguards in the GI specification.

Congratulations once again to IPOPHL, to the people of Albuquerque, and to the Asin Tibuokasinderos” whose labor and tradition now gain legal shield and wider recognition.

But as we both know, registering one GI is like lighting a match in a dark room. The question is—will we fan the flame or let it flicker out?

Let us push: more GI registrations for our unique Filipino products; stronger institutional backing (IPOPHL, DTI, LGUs, RDCs); a culture of quality, provenance, and identity; legislation to secure financing and coordination; and market strategies to turn GI from legal instrument to living brand.

Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com

09088877282/02-08-2026


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