
Is the Philippines' reforestation drive coming up short? – DW – 05/31/2025
The Philippines launched one of the world's largest reforestation efforts. But satellite data and field reports raise questions: Is the program really restoring forests?
Marlo Mendoza is the architect of one of the world's most ambitious regreening programs. His office at the University of the Philippines in Laguna is crammed with books about trees and nature conservation.
Hunched over his desk, he flicks through a glossy government brochure praising his project's successes, with 1.8 billion seedlings planted over 2 million hectares (approximately 4.9 million acres) across the Philippines.
Millions of native trees have been replanted and are now growing into forests, sequestering carbon and supporting wildlife.
Indigenous and farming communities cultivate produce among the forests and former timber cutters now manage tree farms.
Communities sidelined in reforestation effort
This is what Mendoza dreamed of — however, he admits it is far from the reality on the ground.
"We mobilized the entire citizenry to plant, but where are all the trees planted?" Mendoza told DW.
"I made the manual; many provisions were not followed."
The Philippines National Greening Program (NGP) was launched in 2011 as an ambitious response to decades of deforestation, which had become a huge issue during the 1970s and '80s.
But the NGP struggled with natural resource plundering, which depleted the Philippines' forest cover and replaced community and indigenous forests with plantations of invasive exotic species.
An analysis of millions of satellite images suggests that as many as one in every 25 hectares of NGP land experienced a major deforestation event: that is, instead of barren sites being reforested, the opposite occurs: forests are cleared right before or during regreening efforts.
The sites are more often than not managed by communities with only short-term access to the land. They are required to grow single cash crops tied to the volatile global commodity markets, which do not provide a steady income.
A group of environmental investigators that carried out the analysis said the results expose a new pattern of "greenwashing" — a marketing tactic used to make a product or service appear better for the environment than it is.
The most common commodities grown on the sites, including timber and fruit, have a green stamp of approval, potentially eligible for export across the world.
This includes the EU, despite the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), which requires traders to prove that products do not come from land which was deforested after 2020.
Much of the EUDR's attention has focused on small farmers' challenges with proving that their land has not been associated with previous deforestation.
Investigators said the image analysis suggests commodities on these sites have been falsely grown under the sustainable banner.
Native trees cleared to grow cash crops
Additionally, the analysis suggested that forest loss on NGP sites may be more widespread than previously understood.
The clearing of forests included communities trying to take advantage of NGP funds.
Eduardo Corona, a forest ranger in Palawan, an area of the Philippines covered in re-greening program sites, said that one of the most frustrating parts of his job was seeing the NGP used to clear native forests and being powerless to stop it, despite trying to raise the alarm.
Restoring sacred forests in India
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
Corona was able to obtain one of the complaints he filed with his superiors, which relates to the UNESCO-recognized Mount Mantalingahan Protected Landscape.
The DENR Forest Management Bureau (FMB) told investigators that some forest clearing occurred as part of site preparation, particularly in areas dominated by invasive species. They claimed the clearing was a necessary step taken under technical supervision to allow native species to thrive.
The bureau also explained that the monitoring of the program beyond the three-year planting contracts is limited by the scale of the program and budget constraints, with site inspections done by sampling rather than full verification.
In cases where sites failed to meet survival rates, they attributed the underutilized funds to community partners' non-compliance, rather than flaws in program design.
The investigation said independent audits and field reports suggest that deeper issues — including poor site selection, limited community support, and weak long-term sustainability planning — remain unaddressed.
A community regreening program 'too complex' for communities to secure tenure
A major selling point of the re-greening program is that local communities would be given unused land to grow crops, so they would no longer need to chop down forests to survive.
But the process for applying is so complicated that most communities give up seeking long-term tenure and only get access to the land for three years.
Mendoza recounted cases where community groups were given access to land but not harvest rights. Many became overwhelmed with the application process and finally gave up on trying to get long-term access.
This led to despair and sometimes illegal logging activities. "The [community group] may get frustrated then [they] enter into illegal selling transactions and [are] forced to cut trees illegally," he noted.
Monoculture undermines sustainable livelihoods
The regreening program was also designed so that communities would be able to grow local produce for their own consumption. Instead, most are forced to grow risky cash crops for export, including exports to the European Union.
According to Mendoza, communities would need both time and choices to make NGP work as intended, to figure out a sustainable mix of crops to guarantee income for their families. They got neither.
For those who did manage to secure tenure, which guarantees 25-year access to the land, the government's usual mandate for community groups to grow a single cash crop often precluded any hopes for successfully living off the land.
Single crop sites — often fast-growing, cheap timber trees — are vulnerable to market crashes, disease and all the other problems that monoculture brings with it, including the loss of biodiversity.
Just over half of the 1 million hectares of designated production sites are tenured. Six out of 10 hectares are monoculture — sites that are growing just one commodity crop — which is widely considered unsustainable for local communities.
A third of land under the NGP is both untenured and growing a single commodity crop, the least sustainable combination of all.
The forgotten native forests
The regreening program was also intended to regrow and protect native rainforests.
Of the 130,000 sites covering over 2 million hectares across the Philippines, some sites designated as protection areas — where indigenous rainforests and the biodiversity that accompanies them were meant to thrive — have little to no tree cover.
According to the latest satellite imagery, over a third of those sites have no tree cover at all.
Reporting supported by Journalismfund Europe and the Environmental Data Journalism Academy, a program of Internews' Earth Journalism Network and Thibi.
This article is part of the Forest Fraud investigation, which uses remote sensing technology, global supply chain tracking, and ground reporting to expose the drivers of deforestation across protected areas in Southeast Asia.
Edited by: Keith Walker
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Inside the Swiss valley partially swallowed by a glacier – DW – 06/03/2025
The dramatic collapse of Switzerland's Birch glacier wiped the village of Blatten off the map. DW spoke to locals and experts about what happened and what comes next. Days after a natural disaster strikes, you often find survivors combing through rubble for their belongings or shoveling mud out of their crumbling homes. You might see prime ministers walking around the zone offering condolences, or rescue crews operating big, mechanical diggers to clear the scene. But the Swiss village of Blatten is caught in a kind of post-catastrophe paralysis. Buried under millions of cubic meters of rock and ice debris, it has been all but wiped off the map. And the site is still too unstable for crews to access, almost a week after the Birch glacier collapsed and swallowed the Alpine idyll. Evacuated resident Daniel Ritler describes the moment the glacier destroyed his hometown as being like 'an explosion' Image: Rosie Birchard/DW "It was like an explosion — like an explosion in my heart," evacuee Daniel Ritler told DW as he looked out over his buried hometown. "We knew immediately that everything was destroyed." "For seconds, there was an emptiness. You could really feel it," he added. "There was still a bit of hope, but as soon as the fog cleared, we saw the catastrophe." Evacuated in time Ritler, who kept sheep and ran a tourism business in Blatten, is staying with friends for now. "We lost our house, our stables, and of course, all those memories. We lived in a little paradise," he said. Though the deluge is thought to have claimed one life, Ritler and the other roughly 300 residents were evacuated in time. And many here feel lucky to be alive — aware that a similar event in a less wealthy country could have wrought even more damage. Injured cow 'Loni' was evacuated along with most residents of the Alpine village days before the landslide Image: Peter Klaunzer/KEYSTONE/dpa/picture alliance We meet him in Wiler, 3.5 kilometers (2.1 miles) from Blatten and the closest accessible point to the disaster zone, which is now serving as a crisis coordination hub. Here, the usual Alpine soundtrack of birdsong and the river rushing down the valley is drowned out by helicopters taking off, transporting scientists and geologists to survey the damage aerially, and assess the risk of further fallout. Mountain populations 'more and more threatened' One of those experts is glaciologist Saskia Gindraux. "We had a lot of rock and silt and sediment going onto a glacier, and this mass caused the glacier to really push forward — and everything just went down the valley," she explained. The unstable mountain face and thousands of tonnes of rocky debris has made it impossible for emergency workers to intervene to stabilise the zone Image: Cyril Zingaro/KEYSTONE/dpa The Swiss scientist told DW that a "coincidence of causes" led to the collapse. "It's hard to say this is linked to climate change and this one is not. It's hard to put a label on an event, but we are facing really high temperatures here in the Alps," she told DW. "It's twice the normal increase of other parts of the world," she added. Alpine glaciers have been retreating for decades, which Gindraux said makes the rock less stable. "That's one cause ... The other one is maybe permafrost that is melting, and the other one, the geology." "With climate change, we saw that the oldest natural hazards, so rock fall or glacier collapse or landslides, etc, they increase in frequency." "The population in the mountains are more and more threatened with these types of events." Fears neighbors 'won't come back' Aside from the hum of helicopters, the streets of Wiler are quiet. Local resident Alex Rieder is packing up his car: Two black bin bags full of clothes and other basics for his neighbors who have found themselves suddenly homeless. "Will they be compensated for the belongings they lost?" he wondered. "That has to happen quickly. Now because people need money to live. Because if they're gone for 10 or 20 years, they won't come back," Rieder told DW. Image: Rosie Birchard/DW Rieder fears for the future of life in this part of the Alps. "There's only one school left in the entire valley," he said. Inside his garage, Rieder shows us masks he helped craft for the local carnival — just one of many traditions dating back centuries here. He knows that if more people leave, this cultural heritage will become harder and harder to hold onto. But asked if he thinks it will disappear entirely, Rieder is defiant. "Traditions will never die. 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The situation was "stable' on Monday with "no notable changes" at the Birch glacier, according to Swiss broadcaster RTS. But smaller landslides continue, and there has been "no improvement" to allow crews to enter the zone securely. 'We have to find a new purpose' For survivors whose homes and livelihoods are buried in a greyish-brown debris, which authorities say is 100 meters (328 feet) deep in some areas, it's clear there's no going back. From the drivers' seat of his van, with the views of lush mountain landscapes filling the windows and wing mirrors bearing the disaster that unfolded here, evacuee Daniel Ritler told DW it is hard to imagine what life after Blatten might look like. "I built a farm from scratch, always adapting to the challenges of the future," he said, adding: "That was before." "Now we have to find a new place to live and a new purpose. And it will certainly take some time until we can find our way again."


DW
8 hours ago
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Journalists in Serbia pessimistic about pledged media reform – DW – 06/03/2025
Both student protesters and the EU are calling on the Serbian government to ensure media freedom and the rule of law. Will the reforms pledged by Belgrade bring real change or are they just window-dressing for Brussels? For Zoran Strika, a journalist at the Novi Sad-based portal workdays have become almost unbearable. Protests have not let up since the collapse of the canopy at the entrance to Novi Sad railway station killed 16 people last November. The pressure in newsrooms across the country is mounting: There's more work, fewer resources and the threats to journalists are becoming increasingly blatant. After years of facing verbal abuse, Strika says that he was recently physically attacked for the first time while reporting. Physical assault He was filming supporters of the ruling SNS party gathering for a rally in Belgrade when he witnessed a violent assault on a passerby who had tried to take a photo. Student protesters call for more objective and responsible journalism, media freedom and the adherence to ethical standards during a demonstration outside the Belgrade offices of 'Informer,' a pro-government tabloid newspaper Image: SPASA DAKIC/SIPA/picture alliance "Three men knocked him to the ground, started beating him, took his phone and threw it into the Danube. Then one of them saw that I was filming and came after me, trying to grab my phone," Strika told DW. The situation briefly calmed down, and Strika attempted to help the injured man by lending him his phone. Then their attackers returned. "I explained that I was a journalist, told them to back off, and that the police had been called. They snatched my phone from the injured man's hand. I tried to get it back, but they threw it into the Danube," says Strika. Attacks on journalists increasing The Independent Journalists' Association of Serbia (IJAS) recorded 128 cases of attacks and the exertion of pressure on journalists in Serbia in the first five months of the year compared to 166 for all of 2024. "Physical attacks are on the rise, and what's concerning is that they happen even in the presence of the police. Journalists are portrayed as instigators simply for doing their job, and the police do not intervene," Tamara Filipovic Stevanovic, secretary-general of the IJAS, told DW. The biggest issue, she says, is the lack of accountability: Attacks rarely have legal consequences, which allows government-aligned media and public officials to continue targeting independent journalists. After months of student-led anti-graft protests, students blocked the entrances to RTS in Belgrade for two days, accusing the national broadcaster of ignoring their massive movement Image: Oliver Bunic/AFP/Getty Images The surveillance of journalists is also a growing concern. Amnesty International has reported that Serbian authorities have unlawfully monitored journalists' and activists' phones . One of those targeted is local journalist Slavisa Milanov from Dimitrovgrad, who said that spyware was installed on his phone while he was in police custody — without a warrant from the prosecutor. "Are we criminals that such software is used on us?" he said on the N1 television channel. "Whatever happens to me or to someone close to me, I will hold the state responsible." EU withholds millions in response to sluggish reform Local and international watchdogs monitoring media freedom in Serbia have for years been drawing attention to the threat to journalists' safety. Demands for free media have been at the heart of every major civil protest in Serbia over the past decade. The European Union has even included these demands in its requirements relating to Serbia's EU accession process. The country's new reform agenda — which outlines the reforms it must implement by 2027 — prioritizes changes to media laws and the appointment of members to the Regulatory Authority for Electronic Media (REM), which among other things issues broadcasting licenses and supervises TV and radio stations' compliance with the law. From Novi Sad to Brussels: A 1,950-km run for justice To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video After Serbia failed to implement these reforms, the EU delayed the payment of €111 million ($126 million) in aid. The government reacted swiftly, launching a new procedure to select REM members and distributing draft media laws to working groups, which in some cases included experts and representatives of NGOs and unions. "Please send us your comments on all three draft laws within the next 48 hours, so we do not further delay the adoption process and slow down Serbia's European integration," read an e-mail seen by DW that was sent by the Ministry of Information and Telecommunications to working group members. Retaliation against independent media? The IJAS says that it does not feel it is delaying any reforms or slowing down the country's European integration in any way. In response to encouragement from the EU and other international organizations to engage in dialogue with Serbian authorities, the IJAS has done so, even though it feels that it has repeatedly been betrayed by the state. "We are exhausted because we keep working tirelessly, only to find that all our effort, expertise and engagement were in vain," says Filipovic Stevanovic. "Even when something ends up in the law, there's no guarantee it won't be abused or undermined by bylaws that completely alter its intent." That's exactly what happened with the media co-funding system, she explains. People without relevant experience or credibility were appointed to commissions that decide how public funds are allocated to the media. As a result, Novi Sad-based did not receive a single dinar from this funding system for the first time in 2025. Journalists hope that the past seven months of protests in Serbia will raise awareness of the importance of independent, objective journalism Image: Darko Vojinovic/AP Photo/picture alliance Zoran Strika says this is "state retaliation against media outlets that reported professionally on everything that occurred in Novi Sad and Serbia since November 1." According to DW's sources, the funds instead went to outlets with close ties to the ruling party — many of which routinely violate journalistic ethics. 'It will only get worse' "Reforms must be real — not just a checklist on paper," said EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Kaja Kallas during her recent visit to Serbia. But behind closed doors, says the IJAS, there are no assurances that the EU will make sure that Serbia will take a genuine reform path. Indeed, there is a widespread sense of pessimism in Serbia's media sector, with many expecting the situation to deteriorate further. "The media are a crucial tool of this government, and it's very clear that the goal is not to improve the situation but to tighten control even further and turn the media more completely into a propaganda machine," says Tamara Filipovic Stevanovic. Nevertheless, Zoran Strika is hopeful that the protests will lead to a shift in public awareness of the importance of a free and independent media in Serbia. "I hope citizens will recognize the importance of the local media that have truly invested themselves in delivering quality over the years — and that they will be the ones to keep these media alive," he says. Edited by: Aingeal Flanagan


DW
3 days ago
- DW
Is the Philippines' reforestation drive coming up short? – DW – 05/31/2025
The Philippines launched one of the world's largest reforestation efforts. But satellite data and field reports raise questions: Is the program really restoring forests? Marlo Mendoza is the architect of one of the world's most ambitious regreening programs. His office at the University of the Philippines in Laguna is crammed with books about trees and nature conservation. Hunched over his desk, he flicks through a glossy government brochure praising his project's successes, with 1.8 billion seedlings planted over 2 million hectares (approximately 4.9 million acres) across the Philippines. Millions of native trees have been replanted and are now growing into forests, sequestering carbon and supporting wildlife. Indigenous and farming communities cultivate produce among the forests and former timber cutters now manage tree farms. Communities sidelined in reforestation effort This is what Mendoza dreamed of — however, he admits it is far from the reality on the ground. "We mobilized the entire citizenry to plant, but where are all the trees planted?" Mendoza told DW. "I made the manual; many provisions were not followed." The Philippines National Greening Program (NGP) was launched in 2011 as an ambitious response to decades of deforestation, which had become a huge issue during the 1970s and '80s. But the NGP struggled with natural resource plundering, which depleted the Philippines' forest cover and replaced community and indigenous forests with plantations of invasive exotic species. An analysis of millions of satellite images suggests that as many as one in every 25 hectares of NGP land experienced a major deforestation event: that is, instead of barren sites being reforested, the opposite occurs: forests are cleared right before or during regreening efforts. The sites are more often than not managed by communities with only short-term access to the land. They are required to grow single cash crops tied to the volatile global commodity markets, which do not provide a steady income. A group of environmental investigators that carried out the analysis said the results expose a new pattern of "greenwashing" — a marketing tactic used to make a product or service appear better for the environment than it is. The most common commodities grown on the sites, including timber and fruit, have a green stamp of approval, potentially eligible for export across the world. This includes the EU, despite the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), which requires traders to prove that products do not come from land which was deforested after 2020. Much of the EUDR's attention has focused on small farmers' challenges with proving that their land has not been associated with previous deforestation. Investigators said the image analysis suggests commodities on these sites have been falsely grown under the sustainable banner. Native trees cleared to grow cash crops Additionally, the analysis suggested that forest loss on NGP sites may be more widespread than previously understood. The clearing of forests included communities trying to take advantage of NGP funds. Eduardo Corona, a forest ranger in Palawan, an area of the Philippines covered in re-greening program sites, said that one of the most frustrating parts of his job was seeing the NGP used to clear native forests and being powerless to stop it, despite trying to raise the alarm. Restoring sacred forests in India To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Corona was able to obtain one of the complaints he filed with his superiors, which relates to the UNESCO-recognized Mount Mantalingahan Protected Landscape. The DENR Forest Management Bureau (FMB) told investigators that some forest clearing occurred as part of site preparation, particularly in areas dominated by invasive species. They claimed the clearing was a necessary step taken under technical supervision to allow native species to thrive. The bureau also explained that the monitoring of the program beyond the three-year planting contracts is limited by the scale of the program and budget constraints, with site inspections done by sampling rather than full verification. In cases where sites failed to meet survival rates, they attributed the underutilized funds to community partners' non-compliance, rather than flaws in program design. The investigation said independent audits and field reports suggest that deeper issues — including poor site selection, limited community support, and weak long-term sustainability planning — remain unaddressed. A community regreening program 'too complex' for communities to secure tenure A major selling point of the re-greening program is that local communities would be given unused land to grow crops, so they would no longer need to chop down forests to survive. But the process for applying is so complicated that most communities give up seeking long-term tenure and only get access to the land for three years. Mendoza recounted cases where community groups were given access to land but not harvest rights. Many became overwhelmed with the application process and finally gave up on trying to get long-term access. This led to despair and sometimes illegal logging activities. "The [community group] may get frustrated then [they] enter into illegal selling transactions and [are] forced to cut trees illegally," he noted. Monoculture undermines sustainable livelihoods The regreening program was also designed so that communities would be able to grow local produce for their own consumption. Instead, most are forced to grow risky cash crops for export, including exports to the European Union. According to Mendoza, communities would need both time and choices to make NGP work as intended, to figure out a sustainable mix of crops to guarantee income for their families. They got neither. For those who did manage to secure tenure, which guarantees 25-year access to the land, the government's usual mandate for community groups to grow a single cash crop often precluded any hopes for successfully living off the land. Single crop sites — often fast-growing, cheap timber trees — are vulnerable to market crashes, disease and all the other problems that monoculture brings with it, including the loss of biodiversity. Just over half of the 1 million hectares of designated production sites are tenured. Six out of 10 hectares are monoculture — sites that are growing just one commodity crop — which is widely considered unsustainable for local communities. A third of land under the NGP is both untenured and growing a single commodity crop, the least sustainable combination of all. The forgotten native forests The regreening program was also intended to regrow and protect native rainforests. Of the 130,000 sites covering over 2 million hectares across the Philippines, some sites designated as protection areas — where indigenous rainforests and the biodiversity that accompanies them were meant to thrive — have little to no tree cover. According to the latest satellite imagery, over a third of those sites have no tree cover at all. Reporting supported by Journalismfund Europe and the Environmental Data Journalism Academy, a program of Internews' Earth Journalism Network and Thibi. This article is part of the Forest Fraud investigation, which uses remote sensing technology, global supply chain tracking, and ground reporting to expose the drivers of deforestation across protected areas in Southeast Asia. Edited by: Keith Walker