Title: FOOD SECURITY AMIDST CLIMATE CHANGE
1FOOD SECURITY AMIDST CLIMATE CHANGE
- SANTIAGO B. UTZURRUM, JR.
- ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
- COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE
- SILLIMAN UNIVERSITY
2BENEFITS FROM ECOSYSTEM SERVICES
- Provisioning goods that people derived from
ecosystems such as food, freshwater, fuel wood,
timber, fiber, biochemicals, and genetic
resources. - Regulating- are the benefits obtained from
regulation of ecosystem process such as climate
regulation, disease regulation, food regulation
and detoxification. - Cultural- are the non-material benefits such as
spiritual, recreational, aesthetics,
inspirational, educational, communal, and
symbolic - Supporting- are those that are necessary for the
production of other ecosystem services such as
soil formation, primary production and nutrient
cycling.
3FOREST ECOSYSTEM
- Functions
- Protection of the watershed
- Regulating hydrologic cycles
- Climate regulation
- Carbon Sequestration
4FOREST ECOSYSTEM
- Major Problems
- - improper land uses and land degradation
cropping and livestock systems - - widespread degradation and depletion of forest
resources - - inefficient and destructive forest utilization
- - predominance of poverty in the uplands
- - poor economic system to meet basic needs of
local population - - increasing demand for agricultural area for
the rural poor - - peace and order problems in the uplands
- - weak forest management and administration
-
5FOREST ECOSYSTEM
- Effect of Deforestation
- Loss of biodiversity
- Soil erosion and Sedimentation
- Disruption of the water cycle
- Displacement of upland communities
- Increasing poverty in the uplands
- Global warming
-
6AGRICULTURAL ECOSYSTEM
- Frame structure of Philippine economy
- Arable farmland is 26 of total land area
- Absorbs 40 of the work force
- Contributes 1/5 of GDP
- Occupied 7.7 M ha. of land in the 1960s to
around 13 M ha. in 1994 and still increasing -
-
7AGRICULTURAL ECOSYSTEM
- Environmental Concerns, Issues and Threats
- Land degradation/Desertification
- Soil erosion
- Soil mining
- Acidification
- Toxic chemicals/heavy metals
- Drought/Floods
- Water quality deterioration
- Groundwater depletion
- Saltwater intrusion
- Sodic/saline soils
- Waterlogged soils
- Greenhouse Gases
-
8Think about this
- Earths average temperature has risen by 0.6 as
a result of human activities - The soil is alive. One teaspoon of soil contains
20 M fungi and 5 B bacteria - Of the Earths land, an area 2/3s the size of
the Philippines becomes a desert every year. - In the Philippines alone, we are losing about 80
tons per ha. of topsoil every single year - 3/4s of the land area of the Philippines is
already affected by erosion in varying degrees of
severity, with some areas approaching the stage
of desertification - Half of the 423 Philippines rivers are polluted
beyond healthy and legal water quality standards. - Source Oposa, A.A. Jr. 2003.
- The Laws of Nature and Other Stories
9General Influences of ENSO on the Philippine
Climate
- El Niño
- - extended dry season
- - Early end of rainy season
- - Weak monsoon activity
- Less number of tropical cyclones
- Above normal sea level pressure
- Above normal air temperature
- Drier weather condition
- La Niña
- - short dry season
- - early onset of rainy season
- - strong monsoon activity
- - more number of tropical cyclones
- - Below normal sea level pressure
- Wetter weather conditions
10DROUGHT PRONE AREAS
- Major corn and feed grain producing areas located
within the moisture deficit, rain shadow areas of
Region XI (SOCSKSARGEN, portions of Davao del
Sur) - Region 1 and 2 in the Northern Tip of Luzon (Sand
dunes of Ilocos region, significant portions of
Cagayan Valley especially Tuguegarao) - Provinces in the western portions of the country
experiencing Type 1 climate
11Production Losses, effected areas and value of
damages due to El Niño (Source PCARRD, 2001)
- El Niño Years Production Value Area
Affected - Crops Loss (Tons) (Pesos 000)
(Has) - 1997-1998
- Rice 622,106 4,665,795
314,896 - Corn 1,187,346 7,717,749 646,500
12Percentage Change in Livestock and Poultry
Population in 1997-1998 (Source PCARRD, 2001
- Animal/Ranking of Susceptibility Percent
change on population between normal
and El Niño year - 1997-1998
- Swine -79
- Poultry -67
- Goat -45
- Cattle -30
- Carabao -28
- Horse -24
- Average -45.5
13 Summary of Reported and Estimated Losses during
the 1997-1998 El Niño (Source PCARRD, 2001
- Production Losses (Tons) Economic
Losses (in PhP000) - Sector
- Reported Estimated
Reported Estimated - Marine
- Fisheries 7,142.0 22,293
319.21 1,071.60 - Aqua-
- Culture 29,687.0 260,375
1,523.44 6,157.95
14COASTAL ECOSYSTEM
- Population pressure
- Sedimentation (due to deforestation)
- Nutrient run-off (from agricultural activities)
- Pollution (agricultural and industrial discharges
- Destructive fishing methods
- Land conversion (mangrove-fishpond/industrial
uses) - Uncontrolled tourism activities
15Causal Factors of Natural Resource Degradation
- Natural Causes
- - topographic variations/problem soil
- Steep slopes
- Poor drainage
- Coarse textures
- Heavy cracking clays
- Severe fertility limitations
- Saline/sodic soil limitations
- - Volcanic eruptions
16 Causal Factors of Natural Resource Degradation
- Human Induced
- Increasing population and rural poverty
- Poor land and watershed management
- Extensive use of chemical inputs
- - Accelerated land use conversions
- - urbanization/use of ecological fragile lands
- - upland migration
- - Deforestation with unsustainable land use
practices
17 Causal Factors of Natural Resource Degradation
- Policy-Induced
- Absence of a comprehensive national land use
policy and updated land use plans. - non-declaration of lands for agriculture,
biodiversity, human settlements,
industries/commercial centers - Poor enforcement of land use policies and
monitoring of land use conversions.
18UN Convention to Combat Desertification
- Entered into force in Dec 1996 ratified by 60
countries as of Jan 1997. - Objective
- To combat desertification and mitigate the
effects of drought, especially in Africa - Areas of concern
- Improved land productivity, land
rehabilitation, conservation and sustainable use
of land and water resources, among others
19UN Convention on Biological Diversity
- Entered into force in Dec 1993 ratified by over
170 countries as of October 1998. - Goals
- Conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity
and its components fair and equitable sharing of
benefits arising from the utilization of genetic
resources - Areas of concern
- Conservation of biological diversity, regulated
access to genetic resources, impact assessments,
education and public awareness, among others.
20UN Framework on Climate Change
- Entered into force in March 1994 reinforced by
the Kyoto Protocol in Dec. 1997. - Goals
- To stabilize greenhouse gas concentrations within
a timeframe sufficient to allow ecosystems to
adapt, ensure food security and enable
sustainable economic development. - Areas of concern
- Inventory of greenhouse gas emissions,
development of national mitigation and adaptation
programs, among others.
21Importance of Multi-functionality of Agriculture
- Addresses land degradation, biodiversity loss and
climate change - Key to sustainable agriculture
- A platform for linking the 3 conventions