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Koronadal City, South Cotabato, Philippines
Registered Agricultural Engineer with over a decade work in various peace and development work in conflict affected communities of Central and South Central Mindanao.

Nov 15, 2011

PERA SA WATER HYACINTH


The Ligawasan Marsh which covers provinces of Cotabato, Maguindanao, and Maguindanao is having a hard time trying to grapple with the problem of hyacinth or water lily that clogs lakes and rivers, causing floods, and may have contributed to fish kills.

Water hyacinth absorbs oxygen needed by marine life and threaten the livelihood of poor fishermen, threatens places downstreams from flood, etc.

In other countries or even withing Philippines like Naga City, water hyacinths posed livelihood opportunity through processing it into charcoal. A charcoal briqueting machine is needed in order to process the water hyacinth into charcoal, of course, technical knowledge and skills, social marketing, and allocation of fund by the government agencies and other NGOs is among the key to turn the problem of water hyacinth into income generation.

Should this opportunity be shared to the rural communities and provide them pump priming capital, we could at last say that "MAY PERA PALA SA WATER HYACINTH".

3 comments:

SteveK said...

The water hyacinth itself can be compressed into fuel briquettes that can be burned in the new low-pollution stoves that produce charcoal as a byproduct. The charcoal can be used as fuel or as biochar.

SteveK said...

The water hyacinth itself can be compressed into fuel briquettes that can be burned in the new low-pollution stoves that produce charcoal as a byproduct. The charcoal can be used as fuel or as biochar.

Mindanao Journey said...

Thank you very much for the input. I look forward to see local charcoal entrepreneurs selling water hyacinth based charcoal as well as industrial corporations using water hyacinth-based bio-fuel.