NORWAY’S DEFORESTATION POLICY IS A WAKE-UP CALL—WILL THE PHILIPPINES LISTEN?
NORWAY’S DEFORESTATION POLICY IS A WAKE-UP CALL—WILL THE PHILIPPINES LISTEN?
When Norway made headlines by committing to a
zero-deforestation policy, I couldn’t help but ask: When will we, in the Philippines, take forest protection this
seriously?
The Norwegian
government has now pledged that no product entering its public procurement
system should be linked to deforestation. That’s not just a statement of
intent—it’s a policy shift backed by political will. According to the UN-backed
Climate Action, this move is part of Norway’s long-standing leadership in
rainforest protection. Back in 2008, they even put their money where their
mouth is, giving Brazil a whopping $1 billion to help preserve the Amazon. It
worked—Brazil cut deforestation by 75% and spared over 33,000 square miles of
forest.
This latest move
is not just symbolic. Norway’s decision sends a message across the globe: governments must lead by example, not just
rely on voluntary pledges from the private sector. Nils Hermann Ranum of
Rainforest Foundation Norway said it best: “This is an important victory...
Until now, this has not been matched by similar commitments from governments.”
So, what about
us here in the Philippines?
We do have several reforestation and forest
protection programs. The National
Greening Program (NGP), for example, aims to plant 1.5 billion trees
across 1.5 million hectares by 2028. More recently, the Forests for Life campaign launched by
the DENR targets 5 million trees planted and 3.5 million tons of carbon
sequestered by 2038. There's also the Community-Based
Forest Management Program, which rightly empowers local communities to
conserve forestlands.
These are
well-intentioned, yes. But I must ask: Do
they come with the same level of bold commitment and accountability that we’re
seeing from Norway?
Are we banning products that are driving
deforestation? Are we screening
government procurement to ensure that the wood, paper, or palm oil used in
public projects is sustainably sourced? Do we
even know where those materials are coming from?
Our laws, such
as the Revised Forestry Code (P.D. 705) and more recent Department
Administrative Orders (DAOs), provide a good legal framework. We also have a
carbon accounting and verification system in place. But frameworks are only as
good as their enforcement—and that’s where things start to fall apart.
Here’s a
sobering fact: according to the WWF, global deforestation reached 16.3 million acres in 2022, and a big
chunk of that happened in Southeast Asia. The Philippines is not immune.
Illegal logging, land conversion, and mining continue to chip away at what
little primary forest we have left.
Some of our
reforestation programs face challenges, too. Survival rates of planted trees
remain low, and there's often little
post-planting monitoring. Tree planting becomes a photo op, not a
long-term ecological commitment.
Norway’s
example shows that political will matters.
A recent global study concluded that strong governance and civil society
pressure were essential in countries like Brazil and Indonesia where forest
loss has slowed.
So, where’s the
pressure in our case? Where’s the accountability?
I believe it’s
time for the Philippines to adopt its own Zero Deforestation Commitment, starting with public procurement. If government
agencies refuse to buy paper, wood, and other materials unless they’re proven
to be deforestation-free, we would create a powerful economic incentive for
sustainability.
We must also
expand our understanding of deforestation. It's not just about trees—it's about
soil health, biodiversity, and food
security. That’s why I welcome initiatives like the UN’s Global Soil
Biodiversity Observatory (GLOSOB), which aims to monitor underground
ecosystems. We need to do something similar locally. Healthy forests are not
just green canopies—they are living, breathing networks of life, above and
below the ground.
Finally, we
must take a hard look at so-called carbon
offset projects, which are underperforming globally. A University of
Utah study points out that many offset programs—especially forest preservation
efforts—lack transparency and solid verification. We should reform our own
REDD-Plus strategies to ensure that we’re not just ticking boxes, but saving
forests.
In short, we
can no longer afford to treat deforestation as a secondary issue. It’s at the
heart of our fight against climate change, poverty, and disaster vulnerability.
Norway has
raised the bar. Now the question is—will the
Philippines rise to meet it?
Let’s not wait
until our last tree becomes a memory carved into an environmental impact
assessment. Let’s act while we still have forests to protect.
Ramon Ike V. Seneres,
www.facebook.com/ike.seneres
iseneres@yahoo.com,
senseneres.blogspot.com
09-28-2025
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