
Philippines' ‘last ecological frontier' battles demand for nickel
Now the island's forests and communities are vulnerable to mining for its nickel, with the Philippines ramping up operations to meet global demand for metals and minerals to support the green energy transition.
'When you mine nickel, you have to remove the topsoil and forest vegetation, displacing wildlife and causing deforestation,' said Grizelda Mayo-Anda, director of the Environmental Legal Assistance Center, a legal group promoting environmental rights.
In response, Palawan Gov. Dennis Socrates signed a 50-year moratorium in March on all applications for mining agreements and exploration permits in the province.
But Mayo-Anda said it remains to be seen if the ordinance will be implemented following a change in provincial leadership after elections in May.
The Philippines is the world's second largest producer and biggest exporter of nickel, which is used in batteries for electric vehicles, and is critical in the transition to green technologies like wind turbines and solar panels. The International Energy Agency has predicted a 65 percent increase in demand for nickel by the end of the decade.
Palawan has 11 active mines, three of which are large-scale nickel mines spanning four towns, but companies planning to open new mines now cannot get the necessary endorsement from the local government.
Considered by some to be the last ecological frontier of the Philippines, Palawan holds almost half of the country's old-growth forest, 30 percent of its remaining mangroves and 40 percent of its coral reefs, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
Nickel in the Philippines is primarily mined from laterite deposits commonly found near the surface and extracted through open-pit mining methods, and Mayo-Anda said thousands of trees have been cleared in Palawan for mining.
• Philippine province's biodiversity threatened by mining and deforestation.
• Local ordinance bans new mining permits for 50 years.
A study by Conservation International, a nonprofit environmental group, on Palawan's Mt. Mantalingahan protected landscape found in 2008 that the $5 billion value of its ecosystem goods and services — such as clean water, carbon sequestration and biodiversity conservation — far outweighed the value of minerals, then placed at 15 billion pesos ($262 million).
Church resistance
Mayo-Anda, an attorney who has conducted field-based legal advocacy in Palawan for decades, said some farmlands are no longer productive due to disruptions in water cycles and soil erosion she attributed to mining.
'Mining companies may have built schools, tribal halls and roads, but communities, including our politicians, do not have a good cost-benefit analysis of the economic value [of the destruction],' she said.
The local church has stood against new mining activities as well.
'As is often the case, mining companies exploit natural resources, take control and benefit from the natural wealth,' Bishop Socrates Mesiona of the Apostolic Vicariate of Puerto Princesa said.
Bishops in Palawan oppose mining due to its environmental and social impacts that they say could displace communities and affect the poor.
'But the crucial question is whether they have empowered local economies and communities so that when they are gone, the latter can continue to survive decently,' said the bishop.
The three bishops of Palawan, including Mesiona, have also called for a ban on new mining applicants, which number about 68.
'If they are all allowed to operate, then it will surely be the end of Palawan being called 'the last ecological frontier,'' Mesiona said.
While national law gives local governments the authority to assess mining projects and express concerns, it is unclear whether the national government will approve the new mining applications in Palawan after the moratorium.
A recently publicized ruling of the Supreme Court rejected a 25-year moratorium on large-scale mining imposed by another Philippine province, Occidental Mindoro, citing the limited powers of the local government in regulating mining projects.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Arabiya
4 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
Iran names Larijani to head top security body
Iran has appointed veteran politician Ali Larijani to lead Iran's top security body, state media said Tuesday. 'Ali Larijani was appointed secretary of the Supreme National Security Council in a decree by President Masoud Pezeshkian,' official news agency IRNA reported. Larijani, 68, replaces Ali-Akbar Ahmadian, an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) general who was named to the position in May 2023. His appointment comes after a 12-day war in June, launched by Israel and later joined by the United States, during which key Iranian nuclear and military sites were hit. The security council is responsible for laying out Iran's defense and security strategy, but its decisions must be approved by the country's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. The secretary, as the most senior member of the council, oversees the implementation of its decisions. A former member of the IRGC, Larijani has held several senior government positions over three decades. Khamenei made him one of his advisers in May 2020. The following year, Larijani's presidential run was blocked by a government vetting body despite him being considered a leading candidate. Starting in 2005, Larijani had led Iran's nuclear policy but resigned after two years of negotiations with Western powers, citing 'serious differences' with the president at the time, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. As parliament speaker from 2008 to 2020, Larijani put his weight behind the 2015 nuclear agreement with world powers. The son of a grand ayatollah, Larijani comes from an influential Shia Muslim family with ties to the government, and holds a doctorate in philosophy. Tehran and Washington had been engaged in negotiations aimed at reaching a new nuclear deal earlier this year, but the talks were derailed by the Israel-Iran war. Israel said its offensive was aimed at preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, an ambition Tehran has consistently denied pursuing.


Arab News
7 hours ago
- Arab News
Pakistan redefines microenterprises to include more firms, drafts policy for women entrepreneurs
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has lowered the threshold for defining microenterprises to include companies with annual revenues of up to Rs30 million ($106,000) under the national Small and Medium Enterprise (SME) development framework, and has finalized a draft Women's Entrepreneurship Policy, the Prime Minister's Office said on Tuesday. The measures are part of a broader push by the government to revive the economy by expanding private-sector innovation and participation following years of economic distress. Pakistan's financial outlook began improving after securing several International Monetary Fund (IMF) loans and introducing structural reforms that stabilized macroeconomic indicators. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif chaired a review meeting of the Small and Medium Enterprises Development Authority's (SMEDA) steering committee to evaluate the performance of the SME sector. Officials briefed him on reforms aimed at enhancing the authority's institutional capacity and outreach. 'Companies with annual business up to Rs30 million have been classified as microenterprises and brought under SMEDA's scope on the instructions of the Prime Minister,' the statement said. 'The draft of the Women Entrepreneurship Policy has also been prepared and will soon be submitted to the federal cabinet for approval.' Other initiatives discussed during the meeting included the upcoming launch of a digital portal for women entrepreneurs and outsourcing of work related to SMEDA's credit scoring model, SME subcontracting legal framework and export enhancement strategy. SMEDA is also conducting a survey of 20 economic sectors in collaboration with the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics, the statement said. "Small and medium-sized enterprises hold a vital place in the country's development and economy," the prime minister said while addressing the gathering. "The government is working on a priority basis to promote small and medium-sized businesses," he added.


Arab News
8 hours ago
- Arab News
India, Philippines upgrade ties to strategic partnership on Marcos' Delhi visit
New Delhi/Manila: India and the Philippines elevated their ties to a strategic partnership on Tuesday during President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.'s visit to New Delhi, as the two countries also move to boost trade and defense engagements. Marcos is on a five-day visit to India, where he was accorded full ceremonial honors involving a military parade and formal reception before he met with Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The two leaders jointly declared the strategic partnership and agreed to boost cooperation across various areas, including culture, tourism and space. 'India and the Philippines are friends by choice, and partners by destiny. From the Indian Ocean to the Pacific, we are united by shared values. Ours is not just a friendship of the past, it is a promise to the future,' Modi said in a joint press statement. After their navies sailed together for the first time in the South China Sea on Monday, the two countries also agreed on Tuesday to bolster defense collaboration. 'Strengthening defense relations (is) a symbol of deep mutual trust. As maritime nations, maritime cooperation between the two countries is both natural and necessary,' Modi said. India and the Philippines have agreed to establish mechanisms for enhanced maritime cooperation between the Indian and Philippine coast guards and for talks between their militaries. 'We will foster naval and coastguard interoperability via port calls in cooperative activities and capacity building in the maritime domain,' Marcos said. With bilateral trade currently valued at more than $3 billion, Delhi and Manila will start working toward a preferential trade agreement to further strengthen commerce ties, both leaders said. For India, deepening its relations with the Philippines is 'an important step in expanding its presence in East Asia,' said Manoj Kewalramani, a fellow in China studies and chairperson of the Indo-Pacific Studies Programme at the Takshashila Institution. 'The elevation of the relationship to a strategic partnership underscores the growing political proximity between the two nations and the alignment of broader interests,' he told Arab News. Strengthening India-Philippines defense relations is a strategic move for New Delhi to support its interest in the South China Sea region. 'From a strategic perspective, I think it is important for India to work with like-minded countries on shared security concerns and shaping the strategic environment around China's periphery,' Manoj said. 'It is also worth remembering that the South China Sea is a critical route for a substantial amount of Indian merchandise trade. So India has significant interests in the region.' Tensions have continued to run high between the Philippines and China over territorial disputes in the South China Sea, a strategic waterway through which billions of dollars of goods pass each year. Manila and Beijing have been involved in frequent maritime confrontations in recent years, with China maintaining its expansive claims to the area, despite a 2016 international tribunal ruling that its historical assertion had no basis. Upgrading India-Philippines ties to a strategic partnership is indicative of 'the trust that Manila has put in place on India as an important factor in its security calculations,' said Don McLain Gill, a geopolitical analyst and international studies lecturer at De La Salle University in Manila. 'Similarly, India being part of the strategic partnership illustrates its willingness to play a more active role … as an alternative security partner and provider, along with a capacity builder,' Gill told Arab News. He expects India to tailor its defense cooperation with the Philippines based on what Manila needs, adding that there are also possibilities for joint production. 'It indicates that the sky is the limit for what both countries can achieve in the realm of defense and security cooperation, but also other strategic areas such as infrastructure and critical minerals,' he said. 'Elevating strategic partnerships isn't something that the Philippines just freely tosses around. It is earned, and the Philippines, I believe, recognizes the importance of forging closer ties with India and deepening them based on emerging realities and threats and challenges.'