SOLYMONE BLOG

FILIPINOS GO HUNGRY DESPITE MARINE RESOURCES


A man uses a stick to measure the number of dead fish on top of each other after a massive fish kill at Taal Lake, in Talisay, Batangas, south of Manila
MANILA, Philippines - Recently, the SWS released its survey results showing an increase in hunger incidence in the country. Despite the country being blessed with natural resources, a Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey suggests many Filipinos are going hungry.
The lack of an environmental protection programme has left many hungry despite the abundance of natural resources.
  • The degradation of the country's marine resources has reached a point where it now has to import fish species that were once abundant in its waters.
  • "Now there are reports that we are already importing galunggong [a kind of fish],"
  • "But 71 per cent of the fish species in the world are found in the Coral Triangle and the Philippines is one of the six countries that forms part of the area. We are so rich, but why are we hungry?"Senator Loren Legarda said.
  • Galunggong (right photo), or round scad, was once known as the "poor man's fish" as the cheapest species found in the market. But now, because of blast fishing and other illegal practices, the country has to source its supply from abroad.
  • Legarda, who is chair of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, said a recent hearing on the establishment of a Worldfish Centre office in the Philippines revealed environmental degradation has taken its toll on the country's food security.
  • According to the National Fisheries Research and Development Institute, galunggong is one of the three major pelagic species captured in the Philippine seas.
  • "We are blessed with rich and diverse coastal and marine resources such as coral reefs, mangroves, fisheries and many others," Legarda said.
  • "We are now seeing the direct impact of environment degradation and abuse of natural resources to the hunger that many of our citizens have been experiencing for so long.
Legarda said, It is immensely disturbing that we have allowed the depletion of our valuable resources at the risk of leaving nothing for the future generations of Filipinos.
Based on the Fourth Quarter 2011 Social Weather Survey, the proportion of families experiencing involuntary hunger at least once in three months was 22.5 per cent, or an estimated 4.5 million families, up from 21.5 per cent in the previous quarter.
Source: Reuters
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