Saturday, June 27, 2026

FOOD SOVEREIGNTY AND FOOD SUFFICIENCY

 FOOD SOVEREIGNTY AND FOOD SUFFICIENCY

I often wonder: can we make real progress on food independence not only for our nation, but starting small — right down at the barangay? It sounds ambitious, but perhaps not impossible. Inspired by Guyana, the first country in the world to break free from food imports, I think there’s something there we can learn from.

Guyana: A Beacon of Hope

A 2025 study published in Nature Food revealed that Guyana is the only country (among 186) with enough domestic production to meet its population’s nutritional needs — across all seven major food groups — without relying on imports.


This isn’t just a fluke of favorable climate: Guyana has deliberately invested in agriculture. Since 2020, its public budget for agriculture has jumped by 468 %, with GY$430.9 million allocated to rice alone in 2025. 

 Guyana is also playing a regional leadership role: under CARICOM’s “Vision 25 by 2025,” it aims to help reduce the Caribbean’s collective food import bill by 25 %. Still, some caution that true food sovereignty remains fragile: despite its production power, Guyana depends on imported fuel and fertilizers.

Why the Philippines Should Look Closer — at the Barangay Level

Here in the Philippines, we call ourselves an agricultural country — yet today, we import huge swaths of staple items: rice, flour, milk. It seems almost oxymoronic: to claim to be “agricultural” and yet rely so heavily on external supply. Can we shift that narrative — starting in our own backyards, in our own barangays?

  • Food sufficiency means producing enough to meet demand. It’s about volume.

  • Food sovereignty, though, is deeper: who controls the system? Sovereignty means truly not needing imports anymore.

We might not be ready to reach national sovereignty tomorrow — but why not try first at the barangay level?

Is Measuring Food Sufficiency at the Barangay Level Feasible?

I believe yes, and here are some practical ideas — grounded in existing systems:

  1. Barangay Nutrition Action Plans (BNAP)

    • Every barangay has a Barangay Nutrition Scholar (BNS).

    • BNSs already collect data: they weigh children, interview mothers, and assess food availability.

    • We could expand what they track: not just malnutrition, but local food production (crops, livestock), diversity of diets, and how many households depend on market vs locally grown food.

  2. Barangay-Level Farming Data

    • Leverage the Department of Agriculture’s “Plant, Plant, Plant – Adopt a Barangay” program to record how much produce is grown within each barangay.

    • Track yield, the number of households involved, and surplus vs consumption.

  3. Nutrition + Infrastructure Surveys

    • Use community-based nutrition programs (like LAKASS) to map dietary diversity, food security, and resilience at the local level.

    • Involve BAFE (Bureau of Agricultural and Fisheries Engineering), DILG, DOLE to map infrastructure: are there cold storages? Good farm-to-market roads? Storage hubs?

  4. Resilience Metrics

    • Document dependency on external inputs (seeds, fertilizers), vulnerability to pest outbreaks or climate shocks, and whether there are local seed banks or agroecological practices in place.

From these data points, we could build a barangay-level food sufficiency dashboard, measuring production, access, nutrition, infrastructure, and resilience.

From Barangay to Bigger Picture

If even a handful of barangays can document food sufficiency — and eventually sovereignty — imagine the ripple effect:

  • Surplus from “food sovereign” barangays could be shared or traded with other barangays.

  • Local models of agroecology, traditional seeds, and community control could scale up.

  • Demonstrable success could build political will at higher levels — pushing toward regional or national food sovereignty.

But Let Me Ask — Is It Really That Easy?

  • Do all barangays have functioning BNSs? Some may lack capacity, training, or resources.

  • Even if we document production, can small communities always avoid imported inputs? Fertilizers and energy may remain bottlenecks.

  • How do we mobilize support (government, NGOs, private sector) to help barangays invest in infrastructure and capacity?

Final Thoughts

Guyana’s achievement is not merely about geography or luck — it’s about political will, investment, and a people-centered vision of food. If they can do it, perhaps we can begin somewhere much smaller, but no less meaningful: the barangay.

Why not pilot a few barangays — in different regions, with different climates — to test a local food sufficiency-sovereignty model? With data, community commitment, and smart governance, we could reimagine the Philippines not just as an agricultural nation, but as one that truly feeds itself, from the ground up.

Food sovereignty may be a long journey. But at the barangay level — that walk could begin today.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/06-28-2026


Friday, June 26, 2026

FLOATING GARDENS AND HOUSES ON STILTS

FLOATING GARDENS AND HOUSES ON STILTS

Is this what our future is going to look like?
With climate change accelerating, sea levels rising, and floods becoming the “new normal,” I think we should at least entertain the possibility. And if that future does come, it won’t be entirely unfamiliar. After all, floating gardens and houses on stilts already exist—not only in faraway places, but right here in the Philippines.

In many ways, these designs are not futuristic at all; they are ancient, time-tested responses to living with water rather than against it. The Bajau Laut in the Sulu Archipelago have lived in stilt houses above coral-rich shallows for centuries. In Bangladesh, floating gardens—known as dhap—keep food production going even during months of flooding. In Myanmar’s Inle Lake, floating tomato farms stretch across the horizon. And in Mexico, the Aztec chinampas remain as living proof that agriculture can thrive on water.

So if others have done it, why can’t we?

But here’s the bigger question: Should we change the way we build and farm? I think the real answer is yes—if the alternative is to continue building houses on land that is repeatedly submerged, or farming on plains that turn into lakes every rainy season. Maybe the problem is not that the water is rising, but that we haven’t risen to meet the challenge.

If floating gardens can secure food supply even in flood-prone areas, shouldn’t they be part of our national conversation on food security? Imagine low-cost rafts made of bamboo, coconut lumber, and water hyacinth—materials we already have in abundance—producing vegetables year-round. Countries like Bangladesh and South Sudan are already doing this out of necessity. Why aren’t we?

Of course, floating gardens are not the only solution. Vertical farms—stacked, climate-controlled, soil-free—are no longer sci-fi. Singapore is doing it. Japan is doing it. Even Manila has a few small prototypes. If we combine high-density housing with vertical farming, then the skyscrapers of the future could be more than just condos. They could be places where people live, work, farm, shop, exercise, even pray—all in the same building. Some modern condominiums already hint at this model, with rooftop gardens, hydroponics, and co-working spaces.

If rising water forces us to rethink our architecture, why not rethink it boldly?

But for any of this to happen, we need something the government rarely does well: looking ahead. We need building codes that allow houses on stilts—not as an exception, but as a legitimate urban design option. We need agricultural programs that support floating gardens as much as traditional farmland. We need zoning laws that understand that some areas will always flood, and instead of resisting water, we should adapt around it.

The future may be wet—but that doesn’t mean it has to be bleak. Our ancestors lived in harmony with water; maybe we’re the ones who forgot how. If we revive that wisdom and combine it with modern science, the Philippines could become a global model for climate-adaptive living.

We can choose to be victims of rising waters—or we can become architects of a floating future.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/06-27-2026


Thursday, June 25, 2026

WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN FLOOD CONTROL AND FLOOD MANAGEMENT?

 WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN FLOOD CONTROL AND FLOOD MANAGEMENT?

Flooding is becoming an all-too-familiar nightmare in our country, but it seems our understanding of how to deal with it hasn’t caught up. We keep talking about flood control, but what we truly need—and what we rarely deliver—is flood management.

To put it simply: flood control means building things to stop flooding. Think dams, levees, floodwalls, retention basins—the physical, structural defenses. On the other hand, flood management is smarter. It’s holistic. It combines those very structures with policy, planning, early-warning systems, smart zoning, and community preparedness.

In other words, flood control is just one piece of the puzzle. It’s like elementary school: basic, essential, but limited. Flood management, by contrast, is graduate school—it demands deeper thinking, systems-level solutions, and long-term strategy.

So why has our Congress focused almost exclusively on flood control? Why the obsession with concrete dikes and ditches? Because flood control is tangible, visible. It shows up in the budget, in construction contracts, in ribbon-cutting ceremonies. But that visibility can also be a smokescreen. There have been repeated reports of substandard flood control works, overpriced projects, even “ghost” projects. 

The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) has admitted that we don’t yet have a genuine, integrated master plan for floods. We’re doing piecemeal projects—dikes here, drainage channels there—but no coordinated nationwide strategy. That fragmented approach speaks volumes about how shallow our interventions are.

Meanwhile, politicians like Senator Juan Miguel Zubiri have called out this piecemeal budgeting as a major problem. Rather than a few big, well-designed programs, what we get is scattered funds for projects that may or may not work. And critics argue that many of these projects serve the interests of contractors more than the safety of communities. Senator Panfilo Lacson has long warned of corruption and anomalies in flood control funds. 

So yes, it’s time we moved beyond just building dikes. We need flood management—a smarter, broader, more resilient system. Here’s what that would look like:

  1. Integrated planning across agencies — Local governments, national agencies, and communities must coordinate. Flood management isn’t just DPWH’s job.

  2. Land‐use policy and zoning — We should discourage settlements in flood-prone areas. Instead, we should direct growth toward safer zones.

  3. Early-warning systems and community education — Technology matters. Alerts, evacuation routes, flood drills—all of these save lives, not just infrastructure.

  4. Nature-based solutions — Restore wetlands, reforest riverbanks, rehabilitate floodplains. These act as natural sponges when the rains come.

  5. Advanced technological tools — Flood prediction can be strengthened by data analytics, AI, even satellite monitoring. We can also use fluid-dynamics models to understand how water moves through our systems.

  6. Policy reform backed by legislation — Bills being discussed in Congress already reflect this. 

We must spread the responsibility, not just leave it to DPWH to drop concrete where water flows. That’s what flood management calls for: a system that is both structural and adaptive. It requires long-term vision, multi-party cooperation, and yes, brighter minds.

If we continue treating flood control as our endgame, we will keep repeating the same mistakes. But if we embrace flood management—real, integrated, people-centered flood management—we just might break the cycle of flood disaster in this country.

“Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” It's a reminder that changing outcomes requires changing structures, feedback loops, or mental models—not just repeating actions within the same paradigm.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/06-26-2026


Wednesday, June 24, 2026

WHAT ARE RIVER BASINS?

 WHAT ARE RIVER BASINS? 

Have we forgotten about our river basins? To say the least: our priorities have shifted. But as the rains lash our towns and rivers swell, it’s high time to revisit the importance of river basins.

A river basin is not just a piece of geography — it’s the land drained by a river and its many tributaries. Think of it as a giant bowl: all the rain, runoff, everything coming down the hills, collecting into that basin, eventually flowing into a main river and out to the sea. These basins are lifelines: they feed our water supply, support agriculture, nurture ecosystems, and help regulate floods.

Yet, sadly, we’ve neglected them. In many places, river basin areas have been converted into housing. Some have become bustling subdivisions or developments. The moment we built on these natural catchments, we contorted nature’s own drainage system — and we must pay the price when floods come.

That raises a critical question: what do we do with people already living in these high-risk zones? Do we uproot them? Evict thousands? That’s not just impractical, it’s deeply unjust. Professor Segundo “Doy” Romero, a political scientist, proposes a more humane solution: build houses on stilts. Practical, yes — but what about those who can’t afford such options? Are we asking them to leave?

For me, though, the more fundamental question is: how do we prevent the flooding in the first place? It’s not enough to react. We need to tame the water, guide it, not fight it blindly.

One concrete step: Local Government Units (LGUs) must seriously adopt Geographic Information Systems (GIS) in their land-use planning. With GIS, they can map out exactly where river basins lie, trace how water flows, and identify vulnerable zones. This is not theoretical — flood-risk research in the Philippines has already used GIS to map multiple basins like Cagayan, Agno, and Mindanao. 

But will we actually get better at controlling floods? My gut says yes — but only if we manage them like wild horses: not by trying to lock them away, but by training them, channeling them, guiding them so they don’t run amok.

There are encouraging signs. The ADB, working with the DPWH, is rolling out flood risk management master plans for several river basins, including Mindoro’s Mag-Asawang Tubig, the Agno River, and others. Nature-based solutions are part of the mix: restoring old river channels, planting vegetation along riverbanks, even reforesting parts of watersheds. 

We also need deeper, context-specific studies — econometric analyses and flood modeling that tell us not only how much water flows, but why, when, and where. Can we revive the natural absorptive power of floodplains? Are there cost-effective ways to retrofit existing communities — like stilted homes — especially for the most vulnerable?

At the root of this is governance. River basins don’t respect political borders, but our planning often does. LGUs shape their Comprehensive Land-Use Plans (CLUPs) based on barangay or municipal boundaries, not hydrological ones. When that happens, drainage, conservation, disaster risk — everything — becomes fragmented. We need basin-level governance, where upstream and downstream are not adversaries, but partners.

Let’s also remember that our river basins are not just physical systems — they are socio-ecological systems. They store water, yes, but they also sustain communities, wildlife, traditions. The Cagayan River Basin, for example, is home to species like the ludong fish and even rare forest-dwelling birds. 

So, what must we do now?

  1. Strengthen GIS-based land-use planning in every LGU.

  2. Promote nature-based flood resilience: reforest headwaters, restore floodplains, incentivize conservation over development.

  3. Explore adaptive housing solutions, like houses on stilts, especially for people in flood-prone zones.

  4. Push for basin-wide governance frameworks — not just local plans, but integrated water-and-land management.

  5. Invest in research — flood risk mapping, econometric studies, early-warning modeling.

Have we forgotten about river basins? I believe we have — but the floods are reminding us, quite literally, where we went wrong. The challenge now is not just to protect lives, but to restore a balance between our communities and nature’s water highways. If we succeed, we might finally tame the wild horses of flooding.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/06-25-2026


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