Alicia Follosco

Participatory Mapping of the Natural Domain and Ecological and Hydrologic Survey Along with the Local Communities of Chananaw and Tulgao in Tinglayan, Kalinga

Ocular survey.

Brunton Compass lesson with guides.

Some team members resting during trek back to the settlement.

Town/RegionCountryCategoriesDate
TinglayanPhilippinesAsia, Forests20 Dec 2007

The municipalities of Tinglayan, Lubuagan and Pasil in Kalinga, Northern Philippines are being targeted for geothermal exploration and geothermal energy production. The proposed site will cover 26,147 hectares and will affect 27 barangays comprising 10 ancestral domains (NCIP, 2006).

Two of these communities, Chananaw and Tulgao, are seeking assistance for a mapping and inventory of resources within their territories. Mapping the area and a systematic inventory of community resources will provide the people with useful information so that they know exactly what is at stake when making decisions about the proposed geothermal plant and other future modernization projects that might be introduced in the area. The proposed site for the drilling operations in Tinglayan covers 400 hectares of communal forests and is located directly above the people’s swidden farms, rice fields and settlement areas. These communal forests have been conserved and protected over time since they provide the vital water resources to sustain rice production and other subsistence livelihood activities of the local communities.

With documented information in their hands, it is assumed that the communities can better negotiate and reach decisions in relation to proposed projects that are favorable to local welfare. The strategic objective of this project therefore is to enhance people’s governance capacities over critical natural resources. The participatory methodologies of this project will increase local capacity for research as local people adjust to new ways, e.g. the free prior and informed consent (FPIC) process under the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act, of protecting their resources.

At the outset, a group of locally-identified community members will be involved in mapping and database creation with the aid of GIS tools. Copies of the data base will eventually be stationed in the municipalities of Chananaw and Tulgao and the information is expected to be used for decision making on future development projects. The local government is expected to continue updating the database for its use and the communities at large.

For more information contact agfollosco@upb.edu.ph

Project Update: February 2008

I am happy to report that after a long period of waiting for the right time to enter the communities, we finally did so last month. Tulgao, one of our project sites, is actually made up of two distinct political units. We held a community meeting for both sites and have received community endorsement to proceed with the resource inventory and mapping. We were, however, not as successful in Dananao (Chananaw).

The community had refused the project despite some members wanting it earlier. After familiarizing ourselves with the area, we found out that there are afterall two major watersheds, and given our resources, we can only realistically inventory Tulgao. In our final report, we will provide our insights instead on our own experience in Dananao on the process of free and prior informed consent.

Read more about the progress to date together with photographs in the report below.

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Project Update133.5 KB
Final Report

Read about the activities undertaken and findings of this project in the final reports below.

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Final Report146.58 KB
Detailed Final Report1.44 MB

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