Difference between revisions of "Cebu Province News September 2012"

From Philippines
Jump to navigation Jump to search
→ → Go back HOME to Zamboanga: the Portal to the Philippines.
(Created page with "{{zadheader}} {{zheader names1}} {{zheader philippines}} <center><font size=4>'''Province of Cebu'''</font> - [[Cebu Province Archived News|<fon...")
 
Line 12: Line 12:
</table></div>
</table></div>
<!--- DO NOT EDIT ABOVE THIS LINE --->
<!--- DO NOT EDIT ABOVE THIS LINE --->
==Ayala, Aboitiz team up for P10B Mactan airport project ==
*Source:http://business.inquirer.net/81214/ayala-aboitiz-team-up-for-p10b-mactan-airport-project
*Monday, September 10, 2012
:By Doris C. Dumlao (Philippine Daily Inquirer)
The Ayala and Aboitiz groups—two of the country’s biggest and oldest conglomerates both led by Hispanic families—have teamed up to bid for a P10-billion project to redevelop the Mactan International Airport in Cebu.
Ayala Corp. and Aboitiz Equity Ventures Inc. signed a memorandum of agreement on Friday to create a 50-50 joint venture that would serve as their vehicle to build a new terminal for the country’s second-largest international gateway under the public-private partnership (PPP) framework.
Based on a PPP Center briefing paper, the Mactan project will involve the construction of a world-class passenger terminal building with a capacity of eight million passengers a year as well as the operation and maintenance of the old and new facilities.
Ayala president and chief operating officer Fernando Zobel de Ayala said in a disclosure to the Philippine Stock Exchange on Friday that the Ayala group was excited about this partnership. “We cannot think of a better partner for this project than the Aboitiz group, [which] has not only built a long history and heritage in Cebu but also has a successful track record in undertaking significant size projects in multiple industries,” Zobel said.
“Both groups strongly believe in the potential of the Mactan Airport to be a compelling gateway to the country for international passengers and to the Visayas for the growing domestic travelers. We share the vision of creating an airport that provides passengers an efficient and pleasant travel experience,” he added.
AEV president and chief executive Erramon Aboitiz said his group was equally excited about the partnership with Ayala, noting it would give AEV the opportunity to enter into a strategic new segment crucial to developing both the country’s transportation infrastructure and tourism potential.
“It also allows us to harness the Aboitiz group’s competencies in construction, logistics, utilities and real estate development and management. In our over a century of doing business, AEV has always been keen to play a key role in nation building and, consequently, we are therefore keen today to support the government’s thrust to develop the nation’s infrastructure gaps,” Aboitiz said.
“Combined with the Ayala group’s strengths and competencies that have also been honed over more than 100 years of doing business, we are very optimistic about the success potential of this project. Moreover, the fact that the project is in Cebu, which is home to the Aboitiz group, gives it more special meaning to us,” Aboitiz said.
Zobel said both groups were looking forward to leveraging each other’s strengths “in developing and running a modern airport facility that Cebu and [the] country can be proud of.”
==Lapu-Lapu uses trash for garden and hollow blocks==
*Source:http://www.cdn.ph/news_details.php?id=14707
*Sunday, September 9, 2012
:By Jucell Marie P. Cuyos (Correspondent)
Every week, 43-year-old Boyet Ellena and his co-workers harvest vegetables and fruits from a garden in barangay Bangkal, Lapu-Lapu city, part of a 2.5 hectare materials recovery facility (MRF).
Ellena, a resident of barangay Mactan, used to work in the city’s dumpsite before he became a gardener in a nursery that measures 5,000 square meters and grows eggplants, squash, chili, tomatoes, papaya, watermelon, ginger, Chinese kangkong and okra.
Lapu-Lapu City Mayor Paz Radaza said the fresh produce would be given for free to different barangays to motivate them to clean their surroundings “para makita nila ba ang mga produkto sa mga organic fertilizer ug ila matilawan (so they can see and taste the product of using organic
fertilizer).”
Biodegradable trash is mixed and turned into compost that looks like blackish soil.
Lapu-Lapu city is one of the few local governments in Cebu with a fully functioning MRF.
Ninety workers operate three large mechanical conveyor belt units.
Jennifer Alaan, assistant MRF head, said they sort out garbage to set aside biodegradable waste - food scraps, paper, tree branches, plants, etc. to be decomposed into compost.
Non-biodegradable waste like plastic are shredded to be added in the mixture to make hollow blocks or concrete footpaths or plant boxes.
Recyclables like plastic bottles and tin cans will be sold.
Garbage trucks are weighed before and after they arrive at the MRF to determine the load they bring to the facility.
Alaan said the facility receives an average 60 tons of garbage a day.
Barangays bring their trash there from 5 p.m. to dawn.
Trash collected by the city government is dumped there at daytime.
Alaan said that the MRF had been operating 24 hours daily since it opened last Feb. 1, 2009.
The MRF has 273 employees which includes city garbage collectors, city task force members and truck drivers.
In the MRF’s garden, Ellena said they use a mixture of compost and a commercial fertilizer in the soil to produce healthier plants.
The vegetables and fruits, he said, were of better quality than those sold commercially but said the compost is for government use only – in Lapu-Lapu’s beautification and building projects.
For a barangay to get compost, local officials only need a permit from the mayor's office.
She said the hollow block making machine at the MRF could produce 50 hollow blocks .
The ingredients are a bag of cement mixed with sand and shredded plastic.
Residual waste – left-over materials that can’t be recycled or composted – are brought to the closed dumpsite in barangay Mactan for transport to a private facility in Naga City that would process them, said Marvin Francisco, Lapu-Lapu City MRF head.
Francisco said the FDRCON Resource Recovery Management Division in Naga would pick up the remaining residual waste in the dumpsite.
Four trucks a day are sent to remove all residual waste.
Alaan said the Lapu-Lapu City government strictly implements its no-segregation-no-collection policy and that Oponganons know this.
“It's their problem if they get caught because it's the law of the city and the city has a letter from the DENR to implement it,” said Alaan.
MRF personnel also help by organizing clean-up drives in barangays.
Maria Mariza Maglangit, Abuno Elementary School principal, said the school placed bins for segregated trash in their 24 classrooms.
She said teaching students to clean their surroundings and segregate trash was part of the school subject of Good Morals and Right Conduct.
Last March, the school received a citation ticket because it lacked a garbage holding area, an offense that carries a P3,000 fine.
Fortunately the school was allowed to skip the fine and was given a chance to comply with the city ordinance requirement.
Today it has a garbage holding area in a 10 square meter space fenced with galvanized iron sheets.
==Marker for Bacaltos unveiled in Talisay==
*Source:http://www.philstar.com/Article.aspx?articleId=846589
*Saturday, September 8, 2012 12:00 am
:By Garry B. Lao (The Freeman)
CEBU, Philippines - A new historic marker in Talisay City, which stands at the corner of the Cebu South Coastal Road (CSCR), was put up to honor former Constitutional Convention delegate and congressman Antonio Bacaltos Sr. was unveiled yesterday.
The unveiling of marker was also the first time for both Cebu first district Rep. Eduardo “Eddiegul” Gullas and former mayor Delhia Tiu, daughter of former congressman Bacaltos, to face each other in public.
City officials headed by Mayor Socrates Fernandez, Vice Mayor Alan Bucao, and members of the city council attended the unveiling.
Gerald Anthony “Samsam” Gullas, who is eyed to replace Eddiegul, was noticed beaming to see his grandfather and Tiu being together in public after several years of no communication because of politics.
Rep. Gullas and former Talisay mayor Delia Tiu who were previously friends before going their separate ways in 1992, have become allies again and both have announced their plans for Talisay in 2013.
Gullas became a political foe when Tiu’s father, former congressman Antonio Bacaltos Sr., who was a member of the 8th Congress (1987-1992), lost in the 1992 election against the incumbent congressman.
“This is the start of something new. Papa Eddie is trying to unite everyone, not only in Talisay City but also in the entire first district of Cebu,” Samsam told The Freeman.
Samsam said Eddiegul is reaching out even to his political opponents and for the growth and development of the city and the first district.
Last month, the Talisay City council approved the proposed ordinance authored by Councilor Eduardo Gullas III which acknowledges Bacaltos as someone “who left a legacy of noble public service” and “ought to be remembered and honored.”
The main 1,700-meter street of barangays Lawaan 1 and II, Mohon, and Pooc will now be called “Congressman Antonio Bacaltos Sr. Street.”
==Cebu guv to agencies: Monitor whale sharks ==
*Source:http://www.sunstar.com.ph/cebu/local-news/2012/09/07/cebu-guv-agencies-monitor-whale-sharks-241459
*Friday, September 7, 2012
:(FMG of Sun.Star Cebu)
CEBU CITY -- Governor Gwendolyn Garcia directed three agencies and the local government of Oslob to monitor within three months whether the feeding of whale sharks affects their behavior.
The governor gave the directive during a meeting with the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), Bureau of Fisheries, Aquatic Resources (BFAR), Department of Tourism, Oslob Mayor Ronald Guaren and several fishermen on Thursday at the Provincial Capitol.
The meeting was held to take action on the letter sent by DENR-Protected Areas and Wildlife Bureau Director Theresa Mundita Lim to the DENR Central Visayas to stop whale shark feeding since this goes against the protocol of whale shark watching.
“Why do more whale sharks appear in Tan-awan?” said Garcia, who instructed BFAR to monitor the waters and find out the reason behind this, so they can come up with a procedure on how to deal with the marine creatures.
The governor, though, believes there are many whale sharks in the area because of their basic survival instinct, as they feel protected in Barangay Tan-awan.
“First of all, I believe it’s the survival instinct of the whale sharks. They feel that they are now in a safe and secure environment. Second, ang ilang pagkaon naa gyud diha (the whale sharks’ food is there),” Garcia said.
No empirical data
Garcia said even Dr. Al Orolfo, Protected Area, Wildlife Conservation Zone and Management Services (PAWCZMS) Central Visayas technical director, also believes that the feeding of whale sharks should not be stopped immediately since there is no empirical data that would prove that the behavioral pattern of the whale sharks has changed.
Mayor Guaren said he does not subscribe to the thought that the whale sharks behavior was altered.
He said the whale sharks have been there for more than 30 years, and fishermen in the area see them all the time.
“From two whale sharks a day, nidaghan gani sila. Kana nagpasabot, sa atong mga whale sharks komportable sa maong area, unya daghang pagkaon kay naproteksyonan man ilang safety (Their numbers have increased. That means the whale sharks are comfortable and safe in the area, and there is the abundance of food),” Guaren said.
Limbet Susada, Tan-awan Oslob Sea Wardens and Fishermen’s Association president, welcomes the study in their barangay.
Driven away
Susada said fishermen before drove away the whale sharks, which would appear on the surface while they’re fishing.
But after seeing the livelihood potential of having whale sharks around, they no longer drove them away.
They also follow the ordinance imposed by the Municipality of Oslob in protecting the marine animals, he said.
The area began attracting more tourists when the fishermen started feeding the whale sharks to lure them to the surface.
Garcia said it creates a very positive economic impact in the community.
“But the point I’m making here is that when people see the protection of the environment as their livelihood, they will protect the whale sharks with their lives,” the governor said.
Johann Tejada, fisheries specialist of BFAR, said they will verify reports earlier circulated in the media and monitor the animals first before they can give any statements.
==Cebu Buildings Inspected After Quake ==
*Source:http://www.mb.com.ph/articles/372505/cebu-buildings-inspected-after-quake
*Thursday, September 6, 2012, 6:40pm
:By MARS W. MOSQUEDA JR.
CEBU – The Cebu provincial government is conducting thorough inspection of province-owned buildings following the 7.6 magnitude earthquake that rocked Cebu and the Visayas last Friday.
The Provincial Engineer's Office is thoroughly checking government buildings to determine if there were damages incurred as a result of the latest earthquake.
Provincial Planning and Development Officer Engr. Adolfo Quiroga, who also sits as chief of the Provincial Engineer's Office, said Capitol personnel are inspecting buildings for signs of cracks and other damages.
First checked was the Museo Sugbo, which used to be the Cebu Provincial Detention and Rehabilitation Center after Quiroga received reports that there were cracks on some parts of the edifice.
Also checked was the Cebu International Convention Center in Mandaue City, the Cebu Cultural Center in Lahug, and the Legislative Building.
Quiroga clarified that he has not received any reports of major damages in province-owned buildings in Cebu so far.
==DENR-7 joins the 112th Anniversary celebration of Civil Service ==
*Source:http://www.pia.gov.ph/news/index.php?article=1091346764762
*Wednesday, September 5, 2012
:By Hazel F. Gloria(HFG/PIA-7/DENR-7)
CEBU CITY, Sept. 5 (PIA) -- The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) 7 has lined up a series of activities and programs for the whole month of September in line with the celebration of 112th Anniversary of the Philippine Civil Service,
With the theme “Kawani, Ikaw ay Isang Lingkod Bayan!”, the month-long celebration will highlight the value of civil servants commitment to public service as servant heroes of the people.
The activity kicked off last September 3 with a Holy Mass and an opening program of the Civil Service Month at Park Mall, Mandaue City.
Highlights include the National Crime Prevention Week, Association of Regional Executives in National Agencies (ARENA) Sportsfest, and Service Fair of government services.
The DENR 7 will take part in the service fair of government agencies to offer front line services like information, education and communication (IEC) on the issuance of free patents to residential lands, public land titling, and distribute free seedlings to interested participants.
DENR-7 regional executive director Dr. Isabelo Montejo urged the public to take part in the activity to promote, showcase and celebrate the value of public service in the country.
“We must inform the public on the processes and procedures involved in public land titling so that they would know the required fees and at the same time transact only to qualified DENR personnel and not to someone else,” he said.
Montejo explained the necessity of providing accurate and timely information to the public so as to deter other people to exploit their ignorance and we want to help and assist our clients on their concern.
Aside from the Service Fair, the event will also highlight the 18th National Crime Prevention Week on September 1-7, 2012 with the theme, “Sa Crime Prevention, May Magagawa Ako” and the annual Sportsfest of ARENA-7.
== Cebuanos slowly embracing stock market investing - PSE ==
*Source:http://www.philstar.com/Article.aspx?articleId=845176
*Tuesday, September 4, 2012 12:00 AM
:By Ehda M. Dagooc (The Freeman)
CEBU, Philippines - While about 70 percent of the local investors that currently participate in the stock market are from Luzon, the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) is hoping to increase its penetration in the regional market, starting off with the establishment of a satellite office in Cebu.
In an interview with PSE division head for capital market development division Leo Quinito, he said that since the opening of the PSE Cebu office late last year, more and more Cebuanos are now starting to appreciate in investing in the capital market.
PSE is also looking at establishing similar satellite offices in Mindanao in the next couple of months.
Since, the establishment of the PSE Satellite Office at the Insular Building on Cebu Business Park late last year, Quinito said it has attracted 250 new accounts.
Of the 505 thousand investors in the stock exchange, only about 2,500 accounts are coming from the Cebuano investors.
He hopes that in the next few months, more Cebuanos from across market segment, including the young generation, will see the benefits in putting their investments in the capital market.
Due to the good capital market environment in the Philippines, volumes of investors playing in the stock market in the Philippines grew by 32 percent, although he said PSE has yet to achieve its targeted level which is to convince the six million potential Filipinos who are earning above P30 thousand a month.
Of the 99 million Filipinos, only six million earn at least P30,000 a month. This group is one of the targets of the PSE to participate in the equity market, in order to build their wealth.
Currently, there are a total of 505 thousand investors in the stock market, about 95 percent of which are Filipinos, while five percent are foreign investors.
According to Quinito, the country’s good economic standing, should not be downplayed by Filipinos, as this development is grounded by the low interest rate regime, record inflation, improving governance, good performance of listed companies, and the influx of foreign investors to the country.
PSE is reiterating its call to all investors, across the market segments, that investing in the stock market is not only for the affluent and those who have money, but the more that the ordinary earners should take advantage of this high yielding investment instrument.
He said there is a need for Cebuanos to be further educated on the opportunities of investing into stocks. While the affluent market has already taken advantage of this wealth-building opportunity, Quinito said PSE is now looking at the mainstream market to get attracted into putting their hard-earned money in the equity market.
“Cebuanos are very conservative. They want to see something that is tangible. They [Cebuanos] still fearful in taking risks,” Quinito said. However, he added that with the agressive stance of PSE to promote equity market as a safe and high yielding investment channel, he expressed confidence that equity investments in Cebu will grow in a remarkable performance in the next few months.
The Philippine stock market is regarded as number three in the world, and top performer in Asia. This is because of its healthy growth path over the years, despite the threat of economic global economic fragility.
In 2011, average daily value turn-over at the exchange reached to an average of P4 billion a day. This year, average valued reached to P8 billion per day, and it could reach even as high as P16 billion. (FREEMAN)
== Calungsod Canonization Drawing 3,000 Filipinos ==
*Source:http://www.mb.com.ph/articles/372133/calungsod-canonization-drawing-3000-filipinos
*Monday, September 3, 2012, 7:23pm
:By LESLIE ANN G. AQUINO (With a report from Nel B. Andrade)
Around 3,000 people have requested for visa endorsements from Cebu Archbishop Jose Palma to be able to witness the canonization of Blessed Pedro Calungsod in Vatican next month.
Palma, president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP), said he kept signing requests for endorsements that the Italian Embassy already wrote him a letter on the matter.
“In fact, I must have signed 3,000 applicants for visa that the Italian Embassy wrote me about it. They said: Archbishop, you are signing too many endorsements. I said to them it’s my duty to sign, it’s your duty to screen,” he said during the closing of the National Convention of the Catholic Educational Association of the Philippines (CEAP) in Pasay City, Friday.
Palma said he was no longer surprised why many are interested in joining the canonization rites in Rome, saying a candidate for sainthood usually draws a lot of people claiming to be their relatives.
“Over in Cebu we usually say sainthood is relative. If you become a saint you discover that you have many relatives,” he said.
Archbishop Palma cited an 85-year-old man as an example.
“An old man who is 85 said I have to go to Rome, but his children said he is too weak.
He said no, he is my relative I should go. His children were forced to accompany him,” said the Cebu prelate.
Historical records never mentioned the exact place of origin of Calungsod, who was merely identified as “Bisaya.” But historical research identifies Ginatilan in Cebu; Hinunangan and Hinundayan in Southern Leyte; Molo district in Iloilo; and Loboc in Bohol as probable places of origin.
But even if one is not able to go to Vatican, Palma urged the faithful to just join the national celebration in Cebu in November.
“If you could come please be with us in Rome, but if because of your very important work you could not be in Rome, please be with us in Cebu on November 30, for the Thanksgiving Mass,” he said.
“That day as a nation we will thank the Lord for this new saint,” added Palma.
Born in Visayas in 1654, Calungsod, a Filipino Catholic martyr, was doing missionary work in Guam in 1672 when he was killed at age 17.
The Cebuano missionary will be proclaimed a saint on October 21, 2012 in Vatican.
His canonization will take place more than a decade after he was beatified by Pope John Paul II in 2000.
In Rizal province, the Diocese of Antipolo has lined up activities for the upcoming canonization of the country’s second saint, Blessed Pedro Calungsod.
Antipolo Bishop Gabriel V. Reyes said that some of the diocese clergy and the lay people may attend activities for next month’s canonization of Blessed Pedro Calungsod.
Bishop Reyes, who is himself a Visayan as he hails from Kalibo, Aklan, said individuals or small groups may go to Vatican City for the canonization rites or may go to Cebu to join in the local celebration for the canonization of their fellow Visayan Pedro Calungsod.
==Between Carcar city and Aloguinsan Oil exploration in south to start==
*Source:http://www.philstar.com/Article.aspx?articleId=844460
*Sunday, September 2, 2012 12:00 AM
:By Gregg M. Rubio (JPM, The Freeman)
CEBU, Philippines - The Australia-based oil and gas company, Gas2Grid (G2G) Ltd., is set to start its drilling operation within in this month at the covered area of 75,000 hectares between Aloguinsan and Carcar City in southern Cebu.
Energy Undersecretary Jose Layug Jr. and G2G Ltd. Chairman David Munns led yesterday the blessing and public presentation of Oil Drilling Rig-2 assembled in its maintenance yard located in Panadtaran, San Fernando, Cebu.
Rig-2 will then be disassembled and moved to the Jacob-1 location in Carcar City side to commence the drilling operations by the end of the second week of this month.
The company owned Rig-2 is a Gardner Denver 500, 800 horsepower (HP) machine with capacity to drill down to 2,750 meters with 114-millimeter drill pipe or 3,660 meters with 89-mm drill pipe.
Rig-1 which is a Brewster N2 workover rig is currently on the Malolos-1 location in Aloguinsan side undergoing an upgrade before conducting the workover and testing program.
The company employs around 30 local rig crew to assist Filipino and foreign drilling engineers who have experience in Libya.
The Department of Energy awarded Service Contract No. 44 on January 28, 2004 to G2G Ltd.
It has completed various exploration activities, including seismic data acquisition, processing and interpretation that led to the identification and maturation of drillable prospects.
The three wells that will test these drilling prospects are Jacob-1, Gumamela-1 in Carcar City and Ilang-1 in Aloguinsan to depths of 1,000 to 1,300 meters.
The company said the three prospects vary in size and hold resource potential of millions of barrels.
The Jacob-1 site is said to have a potential of 4 million to 50 million barrels recoverable oil.
“We are hoping that with this 50 million (entire resource potential) we can meet some of the demand on the daily basis,” Layug said.
Layug said that daily oil consumption in the country is 300,000 barrels per day with only 6,000 barrels of oils produced daily and the rest are imported.
Layug congratulated G2G for having the first well to be drilled this year using the skills of the Filipinos.
More contracts for oil and gas exploration to be signed this year, said Layug.
He emphasized that the government has not spent any amount for this exploration and the investors themselves gambled their millions of dollars not knowing for sure whether they can get oil and gas.
Munns expressed confidence that they will yield positive results after various exploration activities were completed.
Once successful, the government will get 60 percent while 40 percent of the total revenues will go to the company.  Aloguinsan Mayor Augustus Caesar Moreno said that a lot of attempts to drill in their place since 1960s have failed.
“Maybe this is the time Aloguinsan will be fortunate,” Moreno said.  Since the exploration has started, Moreno said that it already has created economic activities among the locals in the area.
G2G Ltd is engaged in the activity of exploration of oil and gas in the Philippines. The company focuses its operations in oil and gas discovery in Cebu.
==Cebu farmer-scientist Davide wins Magsaysay award==
*Source:http://www.cdn.ph/news_details.php?id=14619
*Saturday, September 1, 2012
: By Carmel Loise Matus (Correspondent) with Inquirer
To make the Philippines prosper, the farmers must be made rich.
This conviction of Dr. Romulo Davide, Cebuano agriculturist and the Philippine's 2012 Ramon Magsaysay Awardee, may get fresh support after he received the international award last night in Pasay City.
President Benigno Aquino III handed out the award, the Asian equivalent to the Nobel peace prize, to Davide and five other achievers from Indonesia, Taiwan, India, Bangladesh, and Cambodia.
“If the farmers are rich, the town becomes rich, [and] the Philippines becomes rich,” Davide said during a lecture last Thursday.
He explained the Farmer-Scientist Training Program which he pioneered in his hometown of Argao, south Cebu in 1994.
By learning from scientists about high-yielding crops and modern agriculture techniques, local farmers suffering in poverty were able to make at least P125,000 a year compared to almost zero before the program, he said in a lecture paper.
The neglected role of agriculture development is something for which Davide's award may be able to generate new momentum.
In 2008, Executive Order 710 was issued by former president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo in 2008 adopting the FSTP program nationwide, but it was still lacking in implementation, he said.
Davide said the program needs to be accelerated and expanded with the help of government agencies as well as local governments.
“[The farmers] have no right to be poor. And we have no right to keep them poor. [But] that’s what’s happening,” Davide said.
For six years he served a as a P1-a-year consultant of Cebu Gov. Gwendolyn Garcia to lead the program in the province. This changed after the 2010 election, when his nephew Hilario “Junjun” Davide III, ran for governor against Garcia and the program was suddenly replaced by another one.
About 15 Davide family members attended last night's Magsaysay awards, inlcuding his younger brother, former chief justice Hilario Davide Jr. with wife Virginia, elder sister Paz, and nephew Junjun.
Junjun Davide, Liberal Party chairman for Cebu province and a gubernatorial candidate, told Cebu Daily News that if he's elected to the Capitol in 2013, “I will retap my uncle and continue his FSTP which will be expanded and given adequate support by the provincial government. Agriculture is the backbone of the economy. “
He was asked how important farming was in a Cebu economy driven by services, Business Process Outsourcing, tourism and the remittances of Overseas Foreign Workers.
“Without it (agriculture), who's going to feed the people involved in these industries?” he said.
Davide, 78, is well known in the academe and science circles as the “Father of Plant Nematology” for his groundbreaking research on nematode pests that infest and destroy agricultural crops.
He aquired his BS Agriculture degree from the University of Los Banos (1957), masters degree from the Oklahoma State University (1962), and his PhD from the North Carolina State University (1966).
In the Farmer-Scientist Training Program (FSTP), a scientist would partner with farmers to teach them science-based agricultural skills to help increase their crop production.
In communities where Davide experimented this partnership, farmers increased production by more than 100 percent. They used to produce half a ton of corn per hectare but now are able to produce four to six tons per hectare, he said in the Thursday lecture.
Farmers also learned about organic fertilizers such as chicken manure and vermi-compost, which are more eco-friendly, effective and cheaper than chemcial-based fertilizers which allowed them to save more than 50 percent in production costs.
Farmers were also taught to become volunteer technicians so they can teach other farmers. They also established cooperatives and associations, with some farmers going on to become local government leaders who actively worked for community development.
Because of the increased capabilities, production, and income of the farmers in Argao, the municipality rose from being a 5th class municipality to a 1st class municipality in 2006.
Davide has since expanded the FSTP program to 37 towns in Cebu and trained more than 30,000 farmers nationwide.
He said in his lecture paper that the program “successfully demonstrated that poor farmers can be technically empowered through direct contact with agricultural scientists/experts to improve their living conditions beyond the poverty level.”
“It has shown that farmer-scientists can also freely share their expertise to untrained fellow farmers as volunteer technicians in their respective barangays,” Davide said.
“Moreover, FSTP-trained farmers also have developed the sense of leadership in their community development projects or became barangay officials themselves.”
According to the Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation, Davide was cited for “his steadfast passion in placing the power and discipline of science in the hands of Filipino farmers, who have consequently multiplied their yields, created productive farming communities, and rediscovered the dignity of their labor.”
Davide received prestigious awards in the past, including the Gregorio Y. Zara Award for Applied Science by the Philippine Association for the Advancement of Science, Inc. (1986), Jose Rizal Pro Patria Gold Medal Award by the Philippine government (1994), and the Outstanding Agricultural Scientist by the Department of Agriculture (1994).
For 2012, six individuals received the Magsaysay award for their contributions in various fields.
Other 2012 awardees are Chen Shu-Chu from Taiwan, Kulandei Francis from India, Syeda Rizwana Hasan from Bangladesh, Yang Saing Koma from Cambodia, and Ambrosius Ruwindrijarto from Indonesia.
They each received a certificate, Magsaysay medallion, and $50,000 cash prize.

Revision as of 12:02, 20 September 2012

A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z
Create Name's page

Regions | Philippine Provinces | Philippine Cities | Municipalities | Barangays | High School Reunions


Province of Cebu - Archived News

Wars of ancient history were about possessions, territory, power, control, family, betrayal, lover's quarrel, politics and sometimes religion.

But we are in the Modern era and supposedly more educated and enlightened .

Think about this. Don't just brush off these questions.

  • Why is RELIGION still involved in WARS? Isn't religion supposed to be about PEACE?
  • Ask yourself; What religion always campaign to have its religious laws be accepted as government laws, always involved in wars and consistently causing WARS, yet insists that it's a religion of peace?

WHY??

There are only two kinds of people who teach tolerance:
  1. The Bullies. They want you to tolerate them so they can continue to maliciously deprive you. Do not believe these bullies teaching tolerance, saying that it’s the path to prevent hatred and prejudice.
  2. The victims who are waiting for the right moment to retaliate. They can’t win yet, so they tolerate.
Cebu metro.jpg
Aerial View of Metro Cebu

Dietary supplement is a product that contains vitamins, minerals, herbs or other botanicals, amino acids, enzymes, and/or other ingredients intended to supplement the diet. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has special labeling requirements for dietary supplements and treats them as foods, not drugs.



Manufacturers and distributors of dietary supplements and dietary ingredients are prohibited from marketing products that are adulterated or misbranded. That means that these firms are responsible for evaluating the safety and labeling of their products before marketing to ensure that they meet all the requirements of DSHEA and FDA regulations.

Ayala, Aboitiz team up for P10B Mactan airport project

By Doris C. Dumlao (Philippine Daily Inquirer)

The Ayala and Aboitiz groups—two of the country’s biggest and oldest conglomerates both led by Hispanic families—have teamed up to bid for a P10-billion project to redevelop the Mactan International Airport in Cebu.

Ayala Corp. and Aboitiz Equity Ventures Inc. signed a memorandum of agreement on Friday to create a 50-50 joint venture that would serve as their vehicle to build a new terminal for the country’s second-largest international gateway under the public-private partnership (PPP) framework.

Based on a PPP Center briefing paper, the Mactan project will involve the construction of a world-class passenger terminal building with a capacity of eight million passengers a year as well as the operation and maintenance of the old and new facilities.

Ayala president and chief operating officer Fernando Zobel de Ayala said in a disclosure to the Philippine Stock Exchange on Friday that the Ayala group was excited about this partnership. “We cannot think of a better partner for this project than the Aboitiz group, [which] has not only built a long history and heritage in Cebu but also has a successful track record in undertaking significant size projects in multiple industries,” Zobel said.

“Both groups strongly believe in the potential of the Mactan Airport to be a compelling gateway to the country for international passengers and to the Visayas for the growing domestic travelers. We share the vision of creating an airport that provides passengers an efficient and pleasant travel experience,” he added.

AEV president and chief executive Erramon Aboitiz said his group was equally excited about the partnership with Ayala, noting it would give AEV the opportunity to enter into a strategic new segment crucial to developing both the country’s transportation infrastructure and tourism potential.

“It also allows us to harness the Aboitiz group’s competencies in construction, logistics, utilities and real estate development and management. In our over a century of doing business, AEV has always been keen to play a key role in nation building and, consequently, we are therefore keen today to support the government’s thrust to develop the nation’s infrastructure gaps,” Aboitiz said.

“Combined with the Ayala group’s strengths and competencies that have also been honed over more than 100 years of doing business, we are very optimistic about the success potential of this project. Moreover, the fact that the project is in Cebu, which is home to the Aboitiz group, gives it more special meaning to us,” Aboitiz said.

Zobel said both groups were looking forward to leveraging each other’s strengths “in developing and running a modern airport facility that Cebu and [the] country can be proud of.”

Lapu-Lapu uses trash for garden and hollow blocks

By Jucell Marie P. Cuyos (Correspondent)

Every week, 43-year-old Boyet Ellena and his co-workers harvest vegetables and fruits from a garden in barangay Bangkal, Lapu-Lapu city, part of a 2.5 hectare materials recovery facility (MRF).

Ellena, a resident of barangay Mactan, used to work in the city’s dumpsite before he became a gardener in a nursery that measures 5,000 square meters and grows eggplants, squash, chili, tomatoes, papaya, watermelon, ginger, Chinese kangkong and okra.

Lapu-Lapu City Mayor Paz Radaza said the fresh produce would be given for free to different barangays to motivate them to clean their surroundings “para makita nila ba ang mga produkto sa mga organic fertilizer ug ila matilawan (so they can see and taste the product of using organic

fertilizer).”

Biodegradable trash is mixed and turned into compost that looks like blackish soil.

Lapu-Lapu city is one of the few local governments in Cebu with a fully functioning MRF.

Ninety workers operate three large mechanical conveyor belt units.

Jennifer Alaan, assistant MRF head, said they sort out garbage to set aside biodegradable waste - food scraps, paper, tree branches, plants, etc. to be decomposed into compost.

Non-biodegradable waste like plastic are shredded to be added in the mixture to make hollow blocks or concrete footpaths or plant boxes.

Recyclables like plastic bottles and tin cans will be sold.

Garbage trucks are weighed before and after they arrive at the MRF to determine the load they bring to the facility.

Alaan said the facility receives an average 60 tons of garbage a day.

Barangays bring their trash there from 5 p.m. to dawn.

Trash collected by the city government is dumped there at daytime.

Alaan said that the MRF had been operating 24 hours daily since it opened last Feb. 1, 2009.

The MRF has 273 employees which includes city garbage collectors, city task force members and truck drivers.

In the MRF’s garden, Ellena said they use a mixture of compost and a commercial fertilizer in the soil to produce healthier plants.

The vegetables and fruits, he said, were of better quality than those sold commercially but said the compost is for government use only – in Lapu-Lapu’s beautification and building projects.

For a barangay to get compost, local officials only need a permit from the mayor's office.

She said the hollow block making machine at the MRF could produce 50 hollow blocks .

The ingredients are a bag of cement mixed with sand and shredded plastic.

Residual waste – left-over materials that can’t be recycled or composted – are brought to the closed dumpsite in barangay Mactan for transport to a private facility in Naga City that would process them, said Marvin Francisco, Lapu-Lapu City MRF head.

Francisco said the FDRCON Resource Recovery Management Division in Naga would pick up the remaining residual waste in the dumpsite.

Four trucks a day are sent to remove all residual waste.

Alaan said the Lapu-Lapu City government strictly implements its no-segregation-no-collection policy and that Oponganons know this.

“It's their problem if they get caught because it's the law of the city and the city has a letter from the DENR to implement it,” said Alaan.

MRF personnel also help by organizing clean-up drives in barangays.

Maria Mariza Maglangit, Abuno Elementary School principal, said the school placed bins for segregated trash in their 24 classrooms.

She said teaching students to clean their surroundings and segregate trash was part of the school subject of Good Morals and Right Conduct.

Last March, the school received a citation ticket because it lacked a garbage holding area, an offense that carries a P3,000 fine.

Fortunately the school was allowed to skip the fine and was given a chance to comply with the city ordinance requirement.

Today it has a garbage holding area in a 10 square meter space fenced with galvanized iron sheets.

Marker for Bacaltos unveiled in Talisay

By Garry B. Lao (The Freeman)

CEBU, Philippines - A new historic marker in Talisay City, which stands at the corner of the Cebu South Coastal Road (CSCR), was put up to honor former Constitutional Convention delegate and congressman Antonio Bacaltos Sr. was unveiled yesterday.

The unveiling of marker was also the first time for both Cebu first district Rep. Eduardo “Eddiegul” Gullas and former mayor Delhia Tiu, daughter of former congressman Bacaltos, to face each other in public.

City officials headed by Mayor Socrates Fernandez, Vice Mayor Alan Bucao, and members of the city council attended the unveiling.

Gerald Anthony “Samsam” Gullas, who is eyed to replace Eddiegul, was noticed beaming to see his grandfather and Tiu being together in public after several years of no communication because of politics.

Rep. Gullas and former Talisay mayor Delia Tiu who were previously friends before going their separate ways in 1992, have become allies again and both have announced their plans for Talisay in 2013.

Gullas became a political foe when Tiu’s father, former congressman Antonio Bacaltos Sr., who was a member of the 8th Congress (1987-1992), lost in the 1992 election against the incumbent congressman.

“This is the start of something new. Papa Eddie is trying to unite everyone, not only in Talisay City but also in the entire first district of Cebu,” Samsam told The Freeman.

Samsam said Eddiegul is reaching out even to his political opponents and for the growth and development of the city and the first district.

Last month, the Talisay City council approved the proposed ordinance authored by Councilor Eduardo Gullas III which acknowledges Bacaltos as someone “who left a legacy of noble public service” and “ought to be remembered and honored.”

The main 1,700-meter street of barangays Lawaan 1 and II, Mohon, and Pooc will now be called “Congressman Antonio Bacaltos Sr. Street.”

Cebu guv to agencies: Monitor whale sharks

(FMG of Sun.Star Cebu)

CEBU CITY -- Governor Gwendolyn Garcia directed three agencies and the local government of Oslob to monitor within three months whether the feeding of whale sharks affects their behavior.

The governor gave the directive during a meeting with the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), Bureau of Fisheries, Aquatic Resources (BFAR), Department of Tourism, Oslob Mayor Ronald Guaren and several fishermen on Thursday at the Provincial Capitol.

The meeting was held to take action on the letter sent by DENR-Protected Areas and Wildlife Bureau Director Theresa Mundita Lim to the DENR Central Visayas to stop whale shark feeding since this goes against the protocol of whale shark watching.

“Why do more whale sharks appear in Tan-awan?” said Garcia, who instructed BFAR to monitor the waters and find out the reason behind this, so they can come up with a procedure on how to deal with the marine creatures.

The governor, though, believes there are many whale sharks in the area because of their basic survival instinct, as they feel protected in Barangay Tan-awan.

“First of all, I believe it’s the survival instinct of the whale sharks. They feel that they are now in a safe and secure environment. Second, ang ilang pagkaon naa gyud diha (the whale sharks’ food is there),” Garcia said.

No empirical data

Garcia said even Dr. Al Orolfo, Protected Area, Wildlife Conservation Zone and Management Services (PAWCZMS) Central Visayas technical director, also believes that the feeding of whale sharks should not be stopped immediately since there is no empirical data that would prove that the behavioral pattern of the whale sharks has changed.

Mayor Guaren said he does not subscribe to the thought that the whale sharks behavior was altered.

He said the whale sharks have been there for more than 30 years, and fishermen in the area see them all the time.

“From two whale sharks a day, nidaghan gani sila. Kana nagpasabot, sa atong mga whale sharks komportable sa maong area, unya daghang pagkaon kay naproteksyonan man ilang safety (Their numbers have increased. That means the whale sharks are comfortable and safe in the area, and there is the abundance of food),” Guaren said.

Limbet Susada, Tan-awan Oslob Sea Wardens and Fishermen’s Association president, welcomes the study in their barangay.

Driven away

Susada said fishermen before drove away the whale sharks, which would appear on the surface while they’re fishing.

But after seeing the livelihood potential of having whale sharks around, they no longer drove them away.

They also follow the ordinance imposed by the Municipality of Oslob in protecting the marine animals, he said.

The area began attracting more tourists when the fishermen started feeding the whale sharks to lure them to the surface.

Garcia said it creates a very positive economic impact in the community.

“But the point I’m making here is that when people see the protection of the environment as their livelihood, they will protect the whale sharks with their lives,” the governor said.

Johann Tejada, fisheries specialist of BFAR, said they will verify reports earlier circulated in the media and monitor the animals first before they can give any statements.

Cebu Buildings Inspected After Quake

By MARS W. MOSQUEDA JR.

CEBU – The Cebu provincial government is conducting thorough inspection of province-owned buildings following the 7.6 magnitude earthquake that rocked Cebu and the Visayas last Friday.

The Provincial Engineer's Office is thoroughly checking government buildings to determine if there were damages incurred as a result of the latest earthquake.

Provincial Planning and Development Officer Engr. Adolfo Quiroga, who also sits as chief of the Provincial Engineer's Office, said Capitol personnel are inspecting buildings for signs of cracks and other damages.

First checked was the Museo Sugbo, which used to be the Cebu Provincial Detention and Rehabilitation Center after Quiroga received reports that there were cracks on some parts of the edifice.

Also checked was the Cebu International Convention Center in Mandaue City, the Cebu Cultural Center in Lahug, and the Legislative Building.

Quiroga clarified that he has not received any reports of major damages in province-owned buildings in Cebu so far.

DENR-7 joins the 112th Anniversary celebration of Civil Service

By Hazel F. Gloria(HFG/PIA-7/DENR-7)

CEBU CITY, Sept. 5 (PIA) -- The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) 7 has lined up a series of activities and programs for the whole month of September in line with the celebration of 112th Anniversary of the Philippine Civil Service,

With the theme “Kawani, Ikaw ay Isang Lingkod Bayan!”, the month-long celebration will highlight the value of civil servants commitment to public service as servant heroes of the people.

The activity kicked off last September 3 with a Holy Mass and an opening program of the Civil Service Month at Park Mall, Mandaue City.

Highlights include the National Crime Prevention Week, Association of Regional Executives in National Agencies (ARENA) Sportsfest, and Service Fair of government services.

The DENR 7 will take part in the service fair of government agencies to offer front line services like information, education and communication (IEC) on the issuance of free patents to residential lands, public land titling, and distribute free seedlings to interested participants.

DENR-7 regional executive director Dr. Isabelo Montejo urged the public to take part in the activity to promote, showcase and celebrate the value of public service in the country.

“We must inform the public on the processes and procedures involved in public land titling so that they would know the required fees and at the same time transact only to qualified DENR personnel and not to someone else,” he said.

Montejo explained the necessity of providing accurate and timely information to the public so as to deter other people to exploit their ignorance and we want to help and assist our clients on their concern.

Aside from the Service Fair, the event will also highlight the 18th National Crime Prevention Week on September 1-7, 2012 with the theme, “Sa Crime Prevention, May Magagawa Ako” and the annual Sportsfest of ARENA-7.

Cebuanos slowly embracing stock market investing - PSE

By Ehda M. Dagooc (The Freeman)

CEBU, Philippines - While about 70 percent of the local investors that currently participate in the stock market are from Luzon, the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) is hoping to increase its penetration in the regional market, starting off with the establishment of a satellite office in Cebu.

In an interview with PSE division head for capital market development division Leo Quinito, he said that since the opening of the PSE Cebu office late last year, more and more Cebuanos are now starting to appreciate in investing in the capital market.

PSE is also looking at establishing similar satellite offices in Mindanao in the next couple of months.

Since, the establishment of the PSE Satellite Office at the Insular Building on Cebu Business Park late last year, Quinito said it has attracted 250 new accounts.

Of the 505 thousand investors in the stock exchange, only about 2,500 accounts are coming from the Cebuano investors.

He hopes that in the next few months, more Cebuanos from across market segment, including the young generation, will see the benefits in putting their investments in the capital market.

Due to the good capital market environment in the Philippines, volumes of investors playing in the stock market in the Philippines grew by 32 percent, although he said PSE has yet to achieve its targeted level which is to convince the six million potential Filipinos who are earning above P30 thousand a month.

Of the 99 million Filipinos, only six million earn at least P30,000 a month. This group is one of the targets of the PSE to participate in the equity market, in order to build their wealth.

Currently, there are a total of 505 thousand investors in the stock market, about 95 percent of which are Filipinos, while five percent are foreign investors.

According to Quinito, the country’s good economic standing, should not be downplayed by Filipinos, as this development is grounded by the low interest rate regime, record inflation, improving governance, good performance of listed companies, and the influx of foreign investors to the country.

PSE is reiterating its call to all investors, across the market segments, that investing in the stock market is not only for the affluent and those who have money, but the more that the ordinary earners should take advantage of this high yielding investment instrument.

He said there is a need for Cebuanos to be further educated on the opportunities of investing into stocks. While the affluent market has already taken advantage of this wealth-building opportunity, Quinito said PSE is now looking at the mainstream market to get attracted into putting their hard-earned money in the equity market.

“Cebuanos are very conservative. They want to see something that is tangible. They [Cebuanos] still fearful in taking risks,” Quinito said. However, he added that with the agressive stance of PSE to promote equity market as a safe and high yielding investment channel, he expressed confidence that equity investments in Cebu will grow in a remarkable performance in the next few months.

The Philippine stock market is regarded as number three in the world, and top performer in Asia. This is because of its healthy growth path over the years, despite the threat of economic global economic fragility.

In 2011, average daily value turn-over at the exchange reached to an average of P4 billion a day. This year, average valued reached to P8 billion per day, and it could reach even as high as P16 billion. (FREEMAN)

Calungsod Canonization Drawing 3,000 Filipinos

By LESLIE ANN G. AQUINO (With a report from Nel B. Andrade)

Around 3,000 people have requested for visa endorsements from Cebu Archbishop Jose Palma to be able to witness the canonization of Blessed Pedro Calungsod in Vatican next month.

Palma, president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP), said he kept signing requests for endorsements that the Italian Embassy already wrote him a letter on the matter.

“In fact, I must have signed 3,000 applicants for visa that the Italian Embassy wrote me about it. They said: Archbishop, you are signing too many endorsements. I said to them it’s my duty to sign, it’s your duty to screen,” he said during the closing of the National Convention of the Catholic Educational Association of the Philippines (CEAP) in Pasay City, Friday.

Palma said he was no longer surprised why many are interested in joining the canonization rites in Rome, saying a candidate for sainthood usually draws a lot of people claiming to be their relatives.

“Over in Cebu we usually say sainthood is relative. If you become a saint you discover that you have many relatives,” he said.

Archbishop Palma cited an 85-year-old man as an example.

“An old man who is 85 said I have to go to Rome, but his children said he is too weak.

He said no, he is my relative I should go. His children were forced to accompany him,” said the Cebu prelate.

Historical records never mentioned the exact place of origin of Calungsod, who was merely identified as “Bisaya.” But historical research identifies Ginatilan in Cebu; Hinunangan and Hinundayan in Southern Leyte; Molo district in Iloilo; and Loboc in Bohol as probable places of origin.

But even if one is not able to go to Vatican, Palma urged the faithful to just join the national celebration in Cebu in November.

“If you could come please be with us in Rome, but if because of your very important work you could not be in Rome, please be with us in Cebu on November 30, for the Thanksgiving Mass,” he said.

“That day as a nation we will thank the Lord for this new saint,” added Palma.

Born in Visayas in 1654, Calungsod, a Filipino Catholic martyr, was doing missionary work in Guam in 1672 when he was killed at age 17.

The Cebuano missionary will be proclaimed a saint on October 21, 2012 in Vatican.

His canonization will take place more than a decade after he was beatified by Pope John Paul II in 2000.

In Rizal province, the Diocese of Antipolo has lined up activities for the upcoming canonization of the country’s second saint, Blessed Pedro Calungsod.

Antipolo Bishop Gabriel V. Reyes said that some of the diocese clergy and the lay people may attend activities for next month’s canonization of Blessed Pedro Calungsod.

Bishop Reyes, who is himself a Visayan as he hails from Kalibo, Aklan, said individuals or small groups may go to Vatican City for the canonization rites or may go to Cebu to join in the local celebration for the canonization of their fellow Visayan Pedro Calungsod.

Between Carcar city and Aloguinsan Oil exploration in south to start

By Gregg M. Rubio (JPM, The Freeman)

CEBU, Philippines - The Australia-based oil and gas company, Gas2Grid (G2G) Ltd., is set to start its drilling operation within in this month at the covered area of 75,000 hectares between Aloguinsan and Carcar City in southern Cebu.

Energy Undersecretary Jose Layug Jr. and G2G Ltd. Chairman David Munns led yesterday the blessing and public presentation of Oil Drilling Rig-2 assembled in its maintenance yard located in Panadtaran, San Fernando, Cebu.

Rig-2 will then be disassembled and moved to the Jacob-1 location in Carcar City side to commence the drilling operations by the end of the second week of this month.

The company owned Rig-2 is a Gardner Denver 500, 800 horsepower (HP) machine with capacity to drill down to 2,750 meters with 114-millimeter drill pipe or 3,660 meters with 89-mm drill pipe.

Rig-1 which is a Brewster N2 workover rig is currently on the Malolos-1 location in Aloguinsan side undergoing an upgrade before conducting the workover and testing program.

The company employs around 30 local rig crew to assist Filipino and foreign drilling engineers who have experience in Libya.

The Department of Energy awarded Service Contract No. 44 on January 28, 2004 to G2G Ltd.

It has completed various exploration activities, including seismic data acquisition, processing and interpretation that led to the identification and maturation of drillable prospects.

The three wells that will test these drilling prospects are Jacob-1, Gumamela-1 in Carcar City and Ilang-1 in Aloguinsan to depths of 1,000 to 1,300 meters.

The company said the three prospects vary in size and hold resource potential of millions of barrels.

The Jacob-1 site is said to have a potential of 4 million to 50 million barrels recoverable oil.

“We are hoping that with this 50 million (entire resource potential) we can meet some of the demand on the daily basis,” Layug said.

Layug said that daily oil consumption in the country is 300,000 barrels per day with only 6,000 barrels of oils produced daily and the rest are imported.

Layug congratulated G2G for having the first well to be drilled this year using the skills of the Filipinos.

More contracts for oil and gas exploration to be signed this year, said Layug.

He emphasized that the government has not spent any amount for this exploration and the investors themselves gambled their millions of dollars not knowing for sure whether they can get oil and gas.

Munns expressed confidence that they will yield positive results after various exploration activities were completed.

Once successful, the government will get 60 percent while 40 percent of the total revenues will go to the company. Aloguinsan Mayor Augustus Caesar Moreno said that a lot of attempts to drill in their place since 1960s have failed.

“Maybe this is the time Aloguinsan will be fortunate,” Moreno said. Since the exploration has started, Moreno said that it already has created economic activities among the locals in the area.

G2G Ltd is engaged in the activity of exploration of oil and gas in the Philippines. The company focuses its operations in oil and gas discovery in Cebu.

Cebu farmer-scientist Davide wins Magsaysay award

By Carmel Loise Matus (Correspondent) with Inquirer

To make the Philippines prosper, the farmers must be made rich.

This conviction of Dr. Romulo Davide, Cebuano agriculturist and the Philippine's 2012 Ramon Magsaysay Awardee, may get fresh support after he received the international award last night in Pasay City.

President Benigno Aquino III handed out the award, the Asian equivalent to the Nobel peace prize, to Davide and five other achievers from Indonesia, Taiwan, India, Bangladesh, and Cambodia.

“If the farmers are rich, the town becomes rich, [and] the Philippines becomes rich,” Davide said during a lecture last Thursday.

He explained the Farmer-Scientist Training Program which he pioneered in his hometown of Argao, south Cebu in 1994.

By learning from scientists about high-yielding crops and modern agriculture techniques, local farmers suffering in poverty were able to make at least P125,000 a year compared to almost zero before the program, he said in a lecture paper.

The neglected role of agriculture development is something for which Davide's award may be able to generate new momentum.

In 2008, Executive Order 710 was issued by former president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo in 2008 adopting the FSTP program nationwide, but it was still lacking in implementation, he said.

Davide said the program needs to be accelerated and expanded with the help of government agencies as well as local governments.

“[The farmers] have no right to be poor. And we have no right to keep them poor. [But] that’s what’s happening,” Davide said.

For six years he served a as a P1-a-year consultant of Cebu Gov. Gwendolyn Garcia to lead the program in the province. This changed after the 2010 election, when his nephew Hilario “Junjun” Davide III, ran for governor against Garcia and the program was suddenly replaced by another one.

About 15 Davide family members attended last night's Magsaysay awards, inlcuding his younger brother, former chief justice Hilario Davide Jr. with wife Virginia, elder sister Paz, and nephew Junjun.

Junjun Davide, Liberal Party chairman for Cebu province and a gubernatorial candidate, told Cebu Daily News that if he's elected to the Capitol in 2013, “I will retap my uncle and continue his FSTP which will be expanded and given adequate support by the provincial government. Agriculture is the backbone of the economy. “

He was asked how important farming was in a Cebu economy driven by services, Business Process Outsourcing, tourism and the remittances of Overseas Foreign Workers.

“Without it (agriculture), who's going to feed the people involved in these industries?” he said.

Davide, 78, is well known in the academe and science circles as the “Father of Plant Nematology” for his groundbreaking research on nematode pests that infest and destroy agricultural crops.

He aquired his BS Agriculture degree from the University of Los Banos (1957), masters degree from the Oklahoma State University (1962), and his PhD from the North Carolina State University (1966).

In the Farmer-Scientist Training Program (FSTP), a scientist would partner with farmers to teach them science-based agricultural skills to help increase their crop production.

In communities where Davide experimented this partnership, farmers increased production by more than 100 percent. They used to produce half a ton of corn per hectare but now are able to produce four to six tons per hectare, he said in the Thursday lecture.

Farmers also learned about organic fertilizers such as chicken manure and vermi-compost, which are more eco-friendly, effective and cheaper than chemcial-based fertilizers which allowed them to save more than 50 percent in production costs.

Farmers were also taught to become volunteer technicians so they can teach other farmers. They also established cooperatives and associations, with some farmers going on to become local government leaders who actively worked for community development.

Because of the increased capabilities, production, and income of the farmers in Argao, the municipality rose from being a 5th class municipality to a 1st class municipality in 2006.

Davide has since expanded the FSTP program to 37 towns in Cebu and trained more than 30,000 farmers nationwide.

He said in his lecture paper that the program “successfully demonstrated that poor farmers can be technically empowered through direct contact with agricultural scientists/experts to improve their living conditions beyond the poverty level.”

“It has shown that farmer-scientists can also freely share their expertise to untrained fellow farmers as volunteer technicians in their respective barangays,” Davide said.

“Moreover, FSTP-trained farmers also have developed the sense of leadership in their community development projects or became barangay officials themselves.”

According to the Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation, Davide was cited for “his steadfast passion in placing the power and discipline of science in the hands of Filipino farmers, who have consequently multiplied their yields, created productive farming communities, and rediscovered the dignity of their labor.”

Davide received prestigious awards in the past, including the Gregorio Y. Zara Award for Applied Science by the Philippine Association for the Advancement of Science, Inc. (1986), Jose Rizal Pro Patria Gold Medal Award by the Philippine government (1994), and the Outstanding Agricultural Scientist by the Department of Agriculture (1994).

For 2012, six individuals received the Magsaysay award for their contributions in various fields.

Other 2012 awardees are Chen Shu-Chu from Taiwan, Kulandei Francis from India, Syeda Rizwana Hasan from Bangladesh, Yang Saing Koma from Cambodia, and Ambrosius Ruwindrijarto from Indonesia.

They each received a certificate, Magsaysay medallion, and $50,000 cash prize.