Showing posts with label EDC Energy Camp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EDC Energy Camp. Show all posts

Friday, August 08, 2014

Sparking Better Lives: Energy Development Corporation’s Unique Summer Youth Camp


At about 570 meters above sea level, the Bacon-Manito Geothermal Complex is a 25,000-hectare protected area spanning the boundaries of Legazpi City and the town of Manito in Albay and the district of Bacon of Sorsogon City in Sorsogon. Within this area is the Pocdol mountains, a group of stratovolcanos; steaming mud pools in Inang Maharang; a “boiling lake” called Naghaso; the Botong Falls; thriving forests, usually of dipterocarps; and several communities. It is home of the flying fox and walking sticks unique to the area such as the Tisamenus deplanata “Pocdol.” Aside from its offices and the geothermal plant, EDC maintains a wildlife rehabilitation and refuge center which presently houses deer and wild boar, a butterfly garden and a 19-hectare mangrove plantation at the coast of Manito 

 Amidst the lush mountains that straddle the provinces of Sorsogon and Albay in the Bicol region, select high school students, grouped into teams, were on competitive challenge race. One challenge had them searching for food items—ingredients for dishes they would cook—using compass bearings. Once completed, they cooked, set the tables, ate what they prepared and washed the dishes. Then, they proceeded to tackle more challenges—figuring out puzzles; relaying water; rolling balls using only PVC pipes cut in half; moving balls using a metal ring and pieces of strings; etc. These tested their agility, creativity, communication skills and how they worked as a team.
This was one of the culminating activities of the annual summer youth camp of the Energy Development Corporation (EDC), the country’s leading producer of geothermal energy, called Energy Camp or e-Camp. The e-Camp is different in several ways. Most obvious is the setting of the camps. All of the camps are held in the geothermal complexes of EDC, most of which are forest reserves and protected areas. EDC maintains, manages and helps protects five sites around the country—in Leyte, Negros, Albay-Sorsogon and North Cotabato.
At about 570 meters above sea level, the Bacon-Manito Geothermal Complex is a 25,000-hectare protected area spanning the boundaries of Legazpi City and the town of Manito in Albay and the district of Bacon of Sorsogon City in Sorsogon. Within this area is the Pocdol mountains, a group of stratovolcanos; steaming mud pools in Inang Maharang; a “boiling lake” called Naghaso; the Botong Falls; thriving forests, usually of dipterocarps; and several communities. It is home of the flying fox and walking sticks unique to the area such as the Tisamenus deplanata “Pocdol.” Aside from its offices and the geothermal plant, EDC maintains a wildlife rehabilitation and refuge center which presently houses deer and wild boar, a butterfly garden and a 19-hectare mangrove plantation at the coast of Manito. 
Appropriately, the camp curriculum includes lessons on the environment, environment-friendly practices like composting, planting of endemic trees in denuded areas, hiking to appreciate the outdoors and the processes of harnessing geothermal energy to understand why it is the cleanest way of producing energy. Other lessons and activities prove to be eclectic. Campers learn basic martial arts, go swimming and have fun activities with ropes such as rappelling and knot-tying. They also undergo leadership and survival skills trainings. First aid lessons and pointers in map reading are thrown in. Indoor lessons include one on Filipino culture, table etiquette, personal hygiene, personality development, ballroom dancing and cooking. A livelihood training—making bead ornaments, for example—is also included. Campers also go on tours of the complex facilities, as well as interesting sites in nearby areas such as Legazpi City. 
These lessons and activities are deemed important by the EDC, which aims for roundedness, thus the diversity. Instead of the usual exercise routines, taekwondo and other martial arts are taught. Not only are the students exercising, they also learn skills to defend themselves, said Paul Aquino, EDC president and chief executive officer from 2004 to 2011, who is the brains behind the e-Camp. On the other hand, ballroom dancing is to learn grace, he said. This year, outdoor activities were enhanced and the survival skills trainings strengthened with the newly-hired disaster and crisis head, Teofredo “RTed” Esguerra, a wilderness physician, rescue instructor and a member of the Philippine expedition to Mount Everest.

EDC Eenrgy Camp founder and advisor shares a light moment with the campers before graduation
Though Aquino retired in 2011, he still acts as a consultant to present EDC president, Richard B. Tantoco, and visits the e-Camps whenever he can to interact with the kids and pep them up. Among the many corporate social projects of EDC, the e-Camp seems to be one of the closest to his heart. He was there when the first e-Camp was held and he helped shape it to what it is today, a shining enclave of fun and learning that many kids aspire for. The impetus for the formation of the e-Camp was a grim incident, hinting that the venture is not entirely without benefits for the company.
“In March 2004, the NPA (New People’s Army) attacked one of our rigs in Leyte, and the worst part was, as the sun was going up, the whole barangay lined up on the ridge watching like there was a movie shooting. I was a brand-new CEO at that time. I asked, how come walang tulong, no nothing? They were just watching,” Aquino related. “I had a climate survey to gauge the sentiments of the people a month later. The climate survey was not very good. At that time, we were looked up as the government. We were a government corporation at that time. In the mountains, there is no government. We were the government. The people did not feel any connection.”
He called the PR department for a meeting and said, “There is something missing. What do we do? Short-run and long-run.”
“In the mountains, there is nothing to do (for these people). So when the NPA came to teach, they came,” Aquino said. “I didn’t understand these things until all of these were explained to me. So I thought, there must something (for the people) to do. So the first thing we did was to donate a Dream satellite, 29-inch TV and one-year subscription for every major barangay. So we had, well, teleseryes. After three months, we conducted another survey to find out the success (of this venture). We found out the teachers of the NPA were also watching the teleseryes. We figured that was kind of successful. That was one of the short-term plans. For another short-term plan, we thought, if we cannot get to the kids, we cannot get to the parents. Once we get the parents, we get the community. So we have to think of something for the kids, but nobody in the company knew about summer camps. So we gathered the employees' kids. That was how the summer camp started.”
The camp is aimed at luring kids away from being recruited or indoctrinated by the NPA, Aquino said. It is also a way of setting up a “social fence,” and part of that social fence is interaction with the community. Another way of seeing the e-Camp is as a bridge, providing a venue for the company and the community to understand each other, as well as to benefit from each other.
The first e-Camp was held in Valencia, Negros Oriental, in 2004, with mostly employees’ children. It was a lab of sorts where EDC employees found out how to conduct a summer camp. The following year, it was conducted in other sites and with children from the communities. Aquino emphasized that the e-Camps are made possible through the volunteerism of their employees. All volunteers are said to have been screened to ensure suitability for the functions at the camp they will undertake. 

Their ability to work together and agility are put to test in this challenge of  an Amazing Race-type activity at the summer camp of EDC  
Participants of the Energy Camp try to roll balls with PVC pipes during a race
 


Campers put their heads together to solve a puzzle during the Amazing Race challenge
Campers perform during the closing ceremony of the Bacon-Manito Energy Camp

 This year, two camps were held—in Bicol and Negros Oriental—involving 112 participants. Because Leyte is still recovering from the devastation of super typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda), an e-Camp was not held there this year. The e-Camp in Mount Apo, North Cotabato, was discontinued a few years ago because of difficulty in logistics. The BacMan e-Camp was held from April 27 to May 2 with 66 campers, all high-school students. Fourteen were children of EDC employees at the main office in Pasig City, while 25 were children of employees of the Bacon-Manito Business Unit. Six campers came from the Pantabangan and Masiway hydropower plants in Nueva Ecija, and 21 are scholars from public schools in EDC’s host communities in Albay and Sorsogon.
There were more children of employees this year. The number-one target of a CSR project is your employees, said Aquino. Still, the e-Camp remains to be an excellent and exciting opportunity for learning and gaining valuable experiences for deserving youths of the host community, who most likely will not have access to this kind of activity because they live in remote areas or are too poor to afford it if there is one available at all.
Campers are housed in comfortable bunkers at the compound, which are really for guests and employees of the company. Mobile phones and other gadgets are confiscated, and campers are not able to communicate with family and friends for a week.
“Being part of this event was not very easy for all of us. First of all, we were far from our home, family, friends and especially Internet, gadgets. Second, we were all ordinary people in this camp. No discrimination and special treatments. At first, I was afraid to join this kind of camp,” revealed Christine Escudero, a 16-year-old student of Sorsogon National High School. “But I learned many new things. I learned that there’s beauty outside our home. There’s beauty behind those mountains and blue sky. I met new people that have very unique talents and faces. I learned how to live independently. I learned how to value life, to protect myself in times of danger. I also discovered my talents...that I can be a good leader and also a good follower.”
“Life is short. Every second counts. I believe that I was able to experience the true meaning of these sayings through EDC's Energy Camp,” recounted 17-year-old Clarisse Evaristo, daughter of an EDC employee from Marikina City and a student of Assumption College in Antipolo City. “I was being stubborn and lazy. I would rather lock myself in my room and spend almost all of my time with my laptop, gadgets and television. I wanted to spend my last summer before senior year relaxed and basically doing nothing.But come to think of it, the idea was really absurd. I mean, why waste every single precious second with mindless activities when you can spend your time enhancing your skills and making an impact or positive change.”
This was further explained by Evaristo's fellow camper, 16-year-old Charlie Dugan, an EDC scholar from the Osiao Paglingap High School: “Masasabi kong napakahalaga ng summer camp na ito lalo na para sa mga kabataang tulad ko. Dahil sa camp na ito, nagamit namin ang oras at panahon sa isang kapakipakinabang at produktibong mgagawain. Naipakita ko kung paano mapapahalagahan ang ating kalikasan.Natuto akong makisalamuha, makibagay at makiisa sa anumang gawain.” (I can say this summer camp is valuable for youths like me. Because of this camp, we spent our time in practical and productive ways. I saw how to value nature.I learned how to get along with others and cooperate in any tasks.)
“Before, I was a silent type of student with lots of fear. But when I joined this camp, it was lessened little by little. Every day and every single night in this camp was important and special for us because it was another time to learn,” said Elline Ebio, a 16-year-old EDC scholar from Osiao Paglingap High School.
“The success of the camp is gauged by the amount of tears shed during graduation," Aquino has always been saying. He has witnessed many tearful goodbyes of campers who had bonded for a week, living together, sharing good food, undergoing activities together, experiencing new things.
Another success of the camp, a more essential one, was observed by Maria Yna Rose Garcia. The 16-year-old student of Sorsogon National High School, who is this year's camper, had a brother and a sister who attended the e-Camp before her.
“They were able to learn life skills and how to be warriors of Mother Earth. They learned and at the same time had fun,” she related. “They had changed. Something changed inside their hearts; they became better persons.”
 
Sixty-six high-school students joined this year’s e-Camp in BacMan: 14 children of EDC employees at the main office in Pasig City; 25 children of employees of the Bacon-Manito Business Unit; six campers from the Pantabangan and Masiway hydropower plants in Nueva Ecija; and 21 scholars from public schools in EDC’s host communities in Albay and Sorsogon
 


Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Energy to the Youth: EDC Lets Students Experience the Summer of Their Lives







Peals of laughter and shouts bounced off the trees, echoing through the ravines and valleys of the upland sitio of Ticala in Caidiocan, Valencia, 21 kilometers west of Negros Oriental’s capital Dumaguete City. They did not disturb the moths, amazing in its variety, that thrive in the still forested and bucolic area in southeastern Negros Island, where Cuernos de Negros mountains dominate the horizon.
Clad in bright orange, 14- and 15-year-old students were cheerily competing in an Amazing Race-type race. Grouped into six teams with amusing names—Amazing Jaguars, Orange Stallions, Nightingales, etc.—48 teenagers had to make twelve pit stops where they had to tackle challenges, putting to test the survival training, such as orienteering and basic map reading, basic mountaineering, basic rope techniques and rappelling, they were taught the previous days. Almost everyone’s favorite was the Slide for Life, a zip line. The V bridge, made entirely of ropes with a single big one to walk on, made many quiver.
A few meters from the campsite, there is a view deck, which affords a panoramic view of the Southern Negros Geothermal Production Field (SNGPF) which constantly releases billows of steam like clouds that float among the jagged and verdant mountains then dissipate into the air. Somewhere, streams are gurgling through forests and villages. One stream has a high iron content that made the rocks and pebbles red in a barangay called Pulangbato.
The race was the culminating activity before graduation at the Energy Camp or E-Camp of the Energy Development Corporation (EDC), the Philippines’ leading geothermal energy company.
Melanie Vineles, 15, and Jeffrey Naceg, 14, of Balugo National High School had heard many good things about E-Camp and said they were happy being part of this year’s summer youth camp. Children of farmers in Valencia, they counted discipline and being independent as the important things they learned, and the Slide for Life zip line and wall climbing as their memorable activities.
From the other side of the island, Lara Felisa Concepcion, 14, from Ramon Torres Louisiana National High School in Bago City, Negros Occidental, was equally delighted to be part of the camp. Being the associate editor of Filipino of their school paper Pagbubukang-liwayway, she said she did not get homesick because she had been away before—for a school publication conference—but the first thing she said she will do upon getting home is to hug her parents, a utility man and a canteen worker at the school she is attending.
From the same province, Nadia T. Repoyla of Minoyan National High School in Murcia, echoed the sentiments of the batch in a testament she delivered at the graduation rite: “I and my fellow campers had truly experienced the enjoyment that we haven’t felt before. We enjoyed all the activities we’ve done. And all of these made a very big impact in ourselves. It developed our socialization [skills] as teenagers. [The camp] aided us on how to improve our skills with the many different activities such as dancing and the sports activities. I had also experienced being tired, and sometimes [there were] ‘lifeless’ moments due to lack of communication with my family and friends, but still the enjoyment and excitement were there.”
Every year, the EDC hold summer camps in its five geothermal project sites in Leyte, Negros, Albay-Sorsogon and North Cotabato for the scholars it is supporting in these communities and some of the employees’ children, all incoming fourth-year high school students. Before there were two separate camps for the Northern Negros Geothermal Production Field (NNGPF) in Negros Occidental and the SNGPF in Valencia, Negros Oriental. Of recent, there is only one camp for both sites.
This year, the E-Camp, which happened from April 12 to 18, has 48 scholars—24 scholars and eight children of EDC employees of SNGPF and sixteen NNGPF. The SNGPF participants came from Pulangbato National High School, Balugo National High School, Valencia National High School and San Pedro Academy Recoletos, all in Valencia, while the NNGPF participants were from Lopez Jaena National High School in Minoyan, Murcia; and Ramon Torres Louisiana National High School in Bago City.
The E-Camp is part of the corporate social responsibility programs of EDC, which has projects in three main areas—environment, education and livelihood—mostly for the benefit of the communities around its sites.
EDC’s projects in education include scholarships, a technical-vocation school in Leyte and the E-Camp, a brainchild and pet project of former EDC president and chief executive officer Paul A. Aquino.
“We envision a program where teenagers can learn as they all have fun. Campers are asked to do simple daily tasks such as fixing their own bed, preparing breakfast, even washing their own clothes and dishes—skills that they will find useful in life. All these we hope that they will pass on to others when they go back to their families and communities,” he explained.
The seven days of the camp are packed full of activities and lectures. There are outdoor activities such as hiking, rappelling, dancing, basic martial arts and survival training. They are taught personal hygiene, fine dining and table etiquette and personality development. They are also taught the importance and benefits of geothermal energy as well as enabled to do their share in conserving the environment through tree-planting activities and making compost pits. They also get the chance to learn livelihood skills such as making beaded accessories with the help of SNGPF’s Community Partnerships team.
They also learn to get along with different people. The group from the two provinces, each with its own languages—Hiligaynon in Occidental and Cebuano in Oriental—are made to intermingle and interact through the many activities. The participants had difficulty understanding each other and used Filipino to communicate, but they got along fine, forging friendships along the way.
Aquino said that the E-Camp was born because of the threat of the leftist rebel group New People’s Army (NPA), which is present in most of the EDC sites. The camp is aimed to lure kids away from being recruited or indoctrinated by the NPA.
Aquino related that the E-Camp started in 2004 in Valencia with children of employees to find out how to do a summer camp. The following year, it was conducted in other sites and with children from the communities.
“In the first three summer camps, I was very hands-on. I wanted to make sure there were no idle moments. There cannot be an idle moment. Masisira ang summer camp ‘pag may idle moment,” Aquino said. “Maraming lecture time just to make sure there were no idle moments. Then there were sports and physical activities.”
He further said: “The camps have metamorphosed into other things and have become one of our signature corporate social responsibility programs now…It has become a community thing for us already.”
He has gone to most of the camps and said that most of them were very successful. He remembered: “The most successful camp we have was the one in Bicol after typhoon Reming, participated in by students from the whole of Albay and Sorsogon. We gathered all the potential valedictorians and salutatorians. They spoke English well and were all cooperative.”
Reming devastated the Bicol Region in November 2006. The following year EDC decided to open the Bacon-Manito E-Camp to students in the whole of Albay and Sorsogon.
On the other hand, “the least successful are those with parents who forced their kids to attend the camp…Not all kids are into camps. One kid like that can destroy a camp,” Aquino said.
The E-Camp is managed by the company’s Emergency Response Team (ERT), composed of volunteers from different departments of the company. This year, an ERT member, Julius Teves, who works at the SNGPF’s human resources office, is the camp commander for Valencia. Though involved in other aspects of camp operations in previous years, it was his first time to be camp commander.
With the help of the local Barangay Emergency Response Team (BERT), the volunteers from the ERT set up some of the facilities of the camp and ready it for the campers. Before the camp, the present site was once a parking lot. Now, there is a bungalow with 48 beds and toilets for the campers. The ERT team also mans the facilities to be used by the campers.
Since the work for the camp is voluntary, Teves said that it is getting harder for them to get volunteers because their schedule won’t allow them to leave work for a week. They don’t receive extra pay. He was not able to go home in the duration of the camp because he felt responsible to the kids.
“I act as their mother and father at the same time,” he added. “Kasi wala silang choice eh. Ako lang nandito. They are not allowed to contact their parents. Their valuables and cell phones are confiscated before the camp.”
Despite the sacrifices, seeing the impact of the camp on the students was worth it.
“I think ang pinaka-goal ng camp is to be independent,” Teves said. “They are taught to wash their own clothes, to wake up early, to be independent, disciplined, and also they have fun with fellows. What’s nice about it is that during the first two days nagkakailangan ‘yan. Medyo kasi nahihiya…Eventually, especially when we are near closing, they feel close to each other.”
At graduation, many would be crying.
“The success of the camp is gauged by the amount of tears shed during graduation,” Aquino said, who have attended many camp graduations. Like a ninong, he would banter with the campers, play games and award money to those who correctly answered his quizzes. He would inquire about the students’ crushes.
Aquino has just retired on August 2010 and is now an advisor to the company. This year’s graduation was his last. He wants to enjoy his grandchildren, he said. He is already doing that. In a sense, the happy campers have become his grandchildren.

Friday, April 22, 2011

Dumaguete, Manjuyod and Valencia in Negros Oriental (April 17 to 19, 2011): A Gallery

From April 17 to 19, 2011, we went to Negros Oriental to cover the Energy Youth Camp of the Energy Development Corporation. I tagged Babe along and he stayed for a day, which was full of side trips. On Sunday, when we arrived at the airport in Sibulan we went straight to Manjuyod for some dolphin watching and swimming at the Manjuyod White Sandbar, where four cottages were erected. We did not catch the dolphin watching. We just joined friends and companions who arrived the previous day at the cottage and had lunch and went for a swim. Afterwards we went to the Tierra Alta, a new subdivision being developed in Palinpinon, Valencia, for the zipline. The Z Rush Zipline based their operations inside the subdivision. After the zipline, we went to Chiccos of Why Not, along Rizal Boulevard, for dinner and somewhere for drinks and videoke. Babe flew back the following day and we proceeded to Ticala in Valencia for the youth camp. Here are some photos: