policies to support bamboo sector development

34
Republic of the Philippines Department of Environment and Natural Resources Ecosystems Research and Development Bureau THE PHILIPPINE EXPERIENCE Myline O. Aparente

Upload: international-bamboo-and-rattan-organisation

Post on 23-Jan-2018

515 views

Category:

Environment


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Republic of the Philippines

Department of Environment and Natural Resources

Ecosystems Research and Development Bureau

THE PHILIPPINE EXPERIENCE

Myline O. Aparente

Page 2: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Outline of Presentation

Status of the Philippine Bamboo Industry

Policies on Bamboo Sector Development

Challenges and Opportunities

Future plans

Page 3: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Status of the Philippine Bamboo Industry

Page 4: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Philippine Bamboo Statistics

62 native and introduced species, only 11 species have high economic value

52,000 hectares of bamboo plantations

60 M poles (demand) vs. 40 M poles (supply) = 20 M poles supply deficit annually

Page 5: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Philippine Bamboo Industry

Main products include furniture and handicrafts; constructions and fishpens, packaging, propping

In 2009, Philippines is one of the top exporters of bamboo products worldwide with a total of $30 million

Policy to promote bamboo industry already exists

From 2012-2014, about P306.3 million worth of investments was made, 261.8 million sales generated and 13,103 were employed

Page 6: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Government institutions, and private sectors had established bamboo plantations either for reforestation, pole and shoot production

Raw materials comes from natural stands and bamboo plantations either from public or private lands

Bamboo Resources

Page 7: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Production

Components of Bamboo Industry

Processing or Manufacturing

Page 8: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Production

Components of Bamboo Industry

Products Consumers Poles Planting stocks (ornamental sp.) Bamboo shoots

House construction sector; fish pen owners; banana growers; makers of fishing boats; bamboo processors (furniture and handicrafts, E-bamboo, musical instruments, barbecues sticks, chopsticks, etc).

Homeowners residing in affluent subdivisions and those engaged in landscaping work.

General public and manufacturers of bamboo shoot products.

Page 9: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Components of Bamboo Industry

Product Consumers Furniture Handicrafts E-bamboo

Homeowners, hotels, restaurants, resorts, others are for exports . Local and foreign tourists, hotels, restaurants and resorts. The biggest dollar earning products of the Philippines. Construction industry (mostly in the form of building materials), homeowners seeking unique furniture and cabinets and house decors.

Processing or Manufacturing

Page 10: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Components of Bamboo Industry

Products Consumers

Musical instruments Sawali Baskets, crates, other woven containers Processed food Pulp and paper

Schools and special groups involved in entertainment activities. House construction sector. General public, producers of vegetables and fruits General public, distributors of food products Public and private offices, schools and colleges, packaging industry, etc.

Processing or Manufacturing

Page 11: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Bamboo Products/Uses

Page 12: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

THE APPROACHES

NODES TO HUB

Nodes – facility for the primary processing of bamboo, producing sticks or slats

Hub – final processing into various engineered bamboo products

Page 13: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

The APPROACHES

NODES to HUB

Establishment of NODES

Establishment of HUB

Page 14: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

The APPROACHES EXPANDING NODE TO SMALL HUB TO BIG HUB

SONZA

Page 15: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

HUB in CITC

TIMPC

TIMPCo

HUB & NODE

Licuan-baay

Tayum

Peñarrubia

TINGGUIAN-ILOKO MULTI-

PURPOSE COOPERATIVE

(TIMPCo)

Dangdangla, Bangued, Abra

Page 16: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Traditional Bamboo Industry Value Chain

PRODUCTION DEMAND

NURSERY EST. and MGMT

FARM MGMT

NATURAL STAND

PLANTATION

Cultivars

TRADITIONAL

PRODUCTS

Bamboo Poles

Handicrafts

and Furniture,

Furnishings

Bamboo Shoots

Bamboo Poles

HARVESTING

Farming, Fishing and Construction

Households

FOREIGN AND

LOCAL BUYERS NURSERY EST.

and MGMT

FARM MGMT

NATURAL STAND

PLANTATION

Cultivars

ENGINEERED BAMBOO

Milling and Composing

Primary Processing

TRADITIONAL

PRODUCTS

Machine, Tools Fabrication, Adhesive Production

Bamboo Poles

Handicrafts

and Furniture,

Furnishings

Floor Boards,

Tiles, Sawali

Boards, Panels,

Furniture,

Furnishings,

Accents

Furniture Comp.

Boards, Panels

Bamboo Poles

HARVESTING

DepEd

FOREIGN AND

LOCAL BUYERS

INSTITUTIONAL

BUYERS

NHA, DPWH

OTHER MARKETS

Hardware and

Construction

Supply Stores

Designers

Furniture Makers Treated Poles,

Slats, Slivers,

Tadtad

Engineered Bamboo Value Chain

Processing Market Production R&D

Page 17: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Sample Engineered Bamboo Value Chain

Processing Market Production

NURSERY EST. and MGMT

FARM MGMT

NATURAL STAND

PLANTATION

Cultivars

ENGINEERED BAMBOO

Milling and Composing

Primary Processing

TRADITIONAL

PRODUCTS

Machine, Tools Fabrication, Adhesive Production

Bamboo Poles

Handicrafts

and Furniture,

Furnishings

Floor Boards,

Tiles, Sawali

Boards,

Panels,

Furniture,

Furnishings

, Accents

Furniture Comp.

Boards, Panels

Bamboo Poles

HARVESTING

DepEd

FOREIGN AND

LOCAL BUYERS

INSTITUTIONAL

BUYERS

NHA, DPWH

OTHER MARKETS

Hardware and

Construction Supply

Stores

Designers

Furniture Makers Treated Poles,

Slats, Slivers,

Tadtad

Primary Processing

Raw Materials Selection and Harvesting

Sample Making & Manufacturing

Machine and Equipment Fabrication

R&D

Page 18: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

NODES & HUBS IN THE COUNTRY

Page 19: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

CAR - Abra

• Langangilang (Hub)

• Tayum (Node)

• San Juan (Node)

• Penarubia (Node)

• Bangued (Node)

Region I

• Bani, Pangasinan (Node)

• Mangatarem, Pangasinan (Hub)

• Alaminos, Pangasinan (Hub)

Region III

• San Luis, Aurora (Start-up Hub)

• Maria Aurora, Aurora (Node)

• Llanera, Nueva Ecija (Node)

•Lubao, Pampanga (Hub)

•Dona Remedios, Bulacan (Node)

Region IV-A

• Talim Island, Cardona, Rizal (Node) c/o DTI

• Cardona Multi-Purpose Cooperative, Cardona, Rizal

(Start-up) /co DOLE

• Tui, Batangas (Node)

Region V

Pawili, Camarines Sur (Hub)

Region VI

Dumalag, Capiz (Start-up)

Miag-ao, Iloilo (Hub)

Sibalom, Antique (Node)

Region XI

Ramon Magsaysay, Zamboanga del Sur (Start-up)

Region XII

ProDev Koronadal City, SoCot (Node)

Sta. Maria, SoCot (Node)

CARAGA

Butuan, Agusan del Sur (Node)

Nodes and Hubs

LEGEND: Node Hub

Page 20: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development
Page 21: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Support programs to strengthen the industry

Provision of shared service facilities

Training

Techno transfer

Access to raw materials

Bamboo expo

Marketing assistance

Research

Loan Assistance for bamboo development projects

Page 22: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Shared Service Facility

• Component of the DTI’s industry cluster development approach employed to micro, small and medium enterprise

• Aims to raise production output, power cost, and improve the level of product quality that could make operation more efficient and consequently becoming competitive

• Required facilities, equipment and tools are being shared by members of the cooperators

Page 23: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Policies to support bamboo sector industry

The Philippine Experience

Page 24: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Executive Order 879

Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs)

Page 25: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Reforestation of at least 50,000 hectares from 2010 to 2020 DENR to use bamboo for at least 20% of its annual reforestation projects

25% of annual desk requirements of DepEd shall be made of bamboo

What constitute EO 879?

Page 26: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

SME related policies that supports bamboo industry

Government’s participation on free trade agreements (FTAs) - pave the way for country’s deeper trade and investment

integration in the global economy

Magna Carta for MSMEs (RA 9501) - Mandatory allocation of at least 8% of credit resources’ total

loan portfolio to MSMEs

Barangay Micro Business Enterprise (RA 9178) Act - Provides support to microenterprise and the informal sector

through incentives to local government registered MEs, tax exemptions/reductions in local taxes, financial support and technological assistance from government institutions

Page 27: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

SME related policies that could supports bamboo industry

Executive Order 241 and 264 - Tariff rate on locally produced goods increased while imported

goods were made as low as possible

2011-2016 MSME Development Plan - Addresses critical constraints to the growth and development

of MSME sector

Universal Access to Competitiveness and Trade (U-Act) - Prepares FTA primers and conducts industry studies along with

policy papers and impact on competitiveness

Page 28: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Challenges and Opportunities

Page 29: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Op

po

rtu

nit

ies

Vast tract of lands for bamboo plantations

Availability of scientific experts doing research on bamboo and industrial engineers who can develop bamboo processing technologies

Bamboo already established its commercial value as substitute for wood, plastic and metal

Support from government and private sectors are in place

Increasing demand for bamboo furniture, handicraft, construction materials and other finished products using 100% e-bamboo

Contributes to climate change mitigation and reduce impact of natural disaster

Opportunities

Page 30: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Ch

alle

nge

s Lack of high tech facilities/ machineries in processing

Lack of supply of bamboo poles as raw materials for finished products

Lack of coordinated action in ensuring a steady supply of bamboo poles

Lack of market information

Substandards quality of products due to: - Low quality of raw materials - Lack of appropriate machinery - Lack of highly skilled technicians - Poor product designs

Page 31: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

4 Future Plans

Page 32: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

» Continue provision of shared service facilities » Maintenance of bamboo nodes and hubs » Conduct of SME Roving Academy » Bamboo advocacy thru mass media » Bamboo Showcases (different events, venues) and

Philippine International Furniture Show » Marketing and Promotion » Financing Facilitation » Continue R and D on bamboo production and utilization

Plans to support bamboo industry in the Philippines

To keep the country's status as one of the world's top bamboo producers, Aquino has filed Senate Resolution No. 1203 seeking to conduct an inquiry on the status of the Philippine Bamboo Industry Development Roadmap.

Page 33: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

Claudio, Cora. Support the Private Partnership on Climate Change, Disaster Preparedness and Sustainability – PPP with a Difference.

Cruz, Merly M. Philippine Bamboo Roadmap Workshop, May 15-16, 2012, Clark, Pampanga, Philippines.

Lantican, Celso B. 2012. Directions for Bamboo Development in the Philippines– an NGO View

Philippine Bamboo Foundation, 2014.

Lanting M.V. Jr, et.al. 2013. Survey of Bamboo Stands and Establishment of a National Database of Economically Important Bamboo Species in the Philippines. ERDB-DENR, Los Baños, Laguna, Philippines.

Razal, Ramon A. and M.C. 2013. Guerrero, Scoping Study on Cutting Edge Technology and Strategies Knowledge on NTFPs for the Green Economy

PBIDC-DTI, Bamboo Industry Plans and Programs for 2015

Virtucio, F. and C. Roxas. 2004. Bamboo Production in the Philippines. ERDB-DENR, Los Baños, Laguna, Philippines.

http://www.mb.com.ph/information-bright-prospect-for-bamboo-industry/#heYDCTL3fHsIT1RI.99

http://www.mb.com.ph/engineered-bamboo-houses-answer-to-sendong-wreck/#5MLGxFODsVcLY3HW.99

http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/276454/economy/agricultureandmining/dti-to-farmers-grow-more-bamboo-to-meet-rising-demand-of-10-b-global-market

https://www.senate.gov.ph/press_release/2015/0227_aquino1.asp

References

Page 34: Policies to Support Bamboo Sector Development

"While the bamboo is planted to protect our environment, we also need to realize its economic potential as communities will have livelihood and job opportunities because of the growing demand,"

Senator Bam Aquino