Sibuyan Island Resiliency
Sibuyan Island Resiliency
Sibuyan Island Resiliency
Building Environmentally
Sustainable and Resilient
Island Communities
Strategic Interventions
In June 2010 Philippine Network of Rural Development
Institutes, Inc. (PhilNet) entered the mining sites of
struggle in San Fernando, Romblon (Barangays Taclobo,
Espaa, Mabini) and Barangay Anislagan, Placer, Surigao
del Norte on invitation from Christian Aid and her partners
- Sibuyan Island Sentinels League for Environment, Inc.
(Sibuyan ISLE) and the Legal Rights and Natural Resources
Centre - Kasama sa Kalikasan/Friends of the Earth
Philippines (LRC-KsK/FoE) respectively, which are members
of Alyansa Tigil Mina (ATM). The contract was to assist the
communities therein to develop sustainable livelihoods
that could build their resilience and also strengthen their
resolve to resist mining in their localities. Scoping visits
were conducted to get an overview of the livelihood
situation of the target barangays and to forge preliminary
understanding about the project with the barangay officials
PhilNets Andres Tionko converses with community elders in the
and, in the case of San Fernando, with the municipal
first year of the resiliency project in Sibuyan Island, Romblon.
government. The baseline then for a resiliency program was
practically zero. The communities were being assisted by Christian Aid through ATM in their struggle to ward
off mining operations in their places. Also, the three barangays of San Fernando were among the beneficiaries
of the relief assistance of Christian Aid in the aftermath of Typhoon Frank/Fengshen.
The project timeframe was August 16, 2010 until August 15, 2011. This was cut short however in June 2011
to pave the way for the three-year (2011-2014) Programme Partnership Agreement (PPA) Resiliency Project
which, for PhilNet, officially commenced in July 2011.
Project activities started with seminar workshops on disaster risk reduction and management (DRRM) and
climate change. The outputs of the planning process were the sitio-based hazard maps and the community
recommendations for barangay contingency plans. Mainstreaming of these agenda were left to the
community to pursue, since the barangay council members of were active participants in the planning
process, so that PhilNet could focus on developing sustainable livelihoods. The outputs of the participatory
capacity and vulnerability analysis (PCVA), however, served as guide for developing sustainable livelihoods.
Philnet believes that sustainable livelihood development should start where the community is, whether there is
room still for improving current livelihoods in terms of enhancing productivity and income and sustainability.
Value chain analysis of current products and services of the community is a handy tool that can guide the
community and households decide on what projects to invest in.
Since all barangays engaged depended on agriculture,
PhilNets intervention commenced with a series of training on
sustainable farming focusing on organic rice and vegetables
cultivation and the production of organic inputs through
composting and fermentation of readily available raw
materials. Having the capacity to produce their own farming
inputs will enable households to save on cost of production
and therefore improve incomes. It can also strengthen their
capacity to bounce back faster after a disaster.
Hence, PhilNets PPA Resiliency Project in Sibuyan Island
highlights PCVA and mainstreaming DRR; and developing
sustainable livelihoods.
Island Paradise
This ice-age island called Sibuyan (composed of three
municipalities in the province of Romblon: Magdiwang,
Cajidiocan and San Fernando) is undoubtedly a hotspot for
biodiversity conservation as seen by the scientific
community. Biologists claim that the island has vast variety
of flora and fauna species found nowhere else in the world.
The National Museum counted 1,551 trees in one hectare
with 223 species, of which 54 are endemic, concluding that
Sibuyan has the worlds densest forest, as confirmed by
noted botanist Dr. Domingo Madulid. Thirty-three percent of
the land area is basically primary forest which covers more
than 140 square kilometers.
This 445 square kilometer island is a center of endemism,
according to the US-based scientific institute The Field
Museum which also says that the beetles and lizards of
Ninox philippinensis spilonota or commonly known as Romblon
Hawk-owl. (Photo credit: Bram Demeulemeester from Flickr)
Sibuyan have yet to be studied, but it would be a good bet
that more new species remain to be discovered by biologists.
Sibuyan Island boasts 700 vascular plant species and is a critical plant site as described by the Philippine
National Herbarium. A scientific study conducted by University of the Philippines researcher Miah Mayo Malixi
shows that there are 35 endangered and endemic species in almost all barangays outside the protected area,
Mt. Guiting-guiting Natural Park (MGGNP). With an approximate area of 15,265.48 hectares, MGGNP has been
established by virtue of Presidential Proclamation 746 in 1996 under the National Integrated Protected Areas
System Act (NIPAS) or Republic Act 7586. Moreover, a publication Priority Sites for Conservation in the
Philippines: Key Biodiversity Areas by the Protected Areas and Wildlife Bureau (PAWB) of the Department of
Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) exposes that there are one critically endangered, four endangered,
and eight vulnerable species of biodiversity within and outside the protected area.
In a publication of DENR together with the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), New Conservation
Areas in the Philippines Project, it assesses that several new (endemic mammal) species have been discovered
in small islands such as Sibuyan (five new species) and Camiguin (two new species), catapulting these islands to
a new status as centers of mammal endemism. It further explained that the distribution of land mammals
illustrates that each island that existed in the Philippines during the latest Ice Age period is a unique center of
biodiversity. Smaller islands that remained isolated during the Ice Age, although small, are also considered
unique centers of biodiversity. One example is Sibuyan Island (463 km2), which hosts four species of endemic
non-flying mammals (plus one bat), a total exceeding that of any country in Europe.
Almost every year, new biological species are being
discovered. In 2008, a new species of stick insect has been
discovered, the Pharnacia magdiwang. In 2010, a new
species of shrew has been documented, Crocidura ninoyi.
Gekko coi or Leonards Forest Gecko, named after famous
taxonomist Leonardo Co, was known in 2011. And in 2012, a
new owl species has been found, Ninox philippensis
spilonota.
Typhoon Frank
Due to the unexpected massive disaster of typhoon Frank on
the 21st of June 2008, majority of houses along the coastal
areas of Sibuyan Island were washed-out and damaged.
Possible contamination of endosulfan, other chemicals and
fuel from the sunken M/V Princess of the stars endangered
the life and livelihood of the island people. Sibuyanons
depend mainly on the abundance of the sea through fishing
and the agriculture industry had been vasty damaged.
Resiliency Project
To address challenges and threats in Sibuyan Island towards attaining sustainable development under
Christian Aids Programme Partnership Agreement, PhilNet focused on community skills and capacity
building, participatory policy formulation and promotion of sustainable livelihoods.
to
disasters
through
training and
information sharing.
Households,
communities
and
resilient livelihoods
beneficiaries
and
safety
develop
nets,
with
Mainstreaming DRRM
PCVA
Mainstreaming DRRM
WASAR
RTDs/Fora
Sustainable Livelihoods
Vermiculture
In the advent of the resiliency project, two kilograms of African
Night Crawler earthworms were distributed in San Fernando
benefiting 8 farmers to start off vermi-composting at the same time
that two units of rice hull carbonizer were provided there to aid the
composting initiatives.
Upon the formal implementation of the project for one year, 2012
saw six household beneficiaries. A year later, at the end of 2013,
PhilNet recorded 33 vermicomposting practitioners which
surprisingly skyrocketed to a number of 63 household practitioners
in March 2014 (with three male members). 15 of the 63 were
supported financially while the rest were provided with earthworms
only either by PhilNet or by other practitioners.
To further note in detail, from 13 households and one elementary
school in March 2013 to 22 households and one elementary school
in September 2013 to 63 households and one elementary school in
March 2014, it was 79.4% increase in one year!
Currently, composters are located in three barangays of San
Fernando (Taclobo, Espaa and Mabulo), who has formed an
association to strengthen production and marketing, and two in
Cajidiocan (Danao and Alibagon).
Having 0.2 hectares of ricefield, Minerva Romero of Espaa now
harvests a maximum of 25 cavans of rice using only three bags of
vermicast which costs only Php 1,500.00 from getting only 20-22
cavans spending an expensive Php 2,500.00 cost of two bags of
urea chemical fertilizer.
In tandem with her husband, Taclobo resident Anna Rollon who
heads the association, she experienced an increased production
capacity of 500% after three years with 99% of the product sold.
Male composter Jerson Vicente of Taclobo has been using his
vermicast product for his own rice farm. In the first cropping 2013,
he managed to decrease chemical fertilizer utilization by 50%.
At present, PhilNet estimated vermicast production capacity at one
metric ton per week with monetary value of P10,00 per week.
As a result, this intervention contributed to resilient livelihoods
building through improved income and cost reduction; income
opportunities for neighbours from selling of substrates to
composters; sturdier crops as observed by users; healthy food rice
and vegetables; involvement of entire family in the enterprise
(enhanced family synergy); influencing farming system in the
locality; cleaner environment; and carbon emission reduction from
reduced use of chemical fertilizers.
Sustainable Livelihoods
Fisheries
Sustainable Livelihoods
Garments/Sewing