ILOILO CITY — The Office of the City Environment and Natural Resources Officer and the Bureau of Customs planted 40 native Banaba trees along Iloilo Sunset Boulevard on June 19, 2026. The initiative added shaded greenery to the coastal corridor, boosting the area’s appeal for both residents and visitors.
A Greener Boulevard for a Cooler City
The newly planted Banaba trees stretch along the popular waterfront promenade, creating a natural canopy that reduces ground temperature. Their broad leaves filter sunlight, making midday walks more comfortable. The trees also absorb stormwater, easing runoff during heavy rains.
The partnership between OCENRO and the Bureau of Customs reflects a whole-of-community approach to urban greening. Volunteers and government staff worked side by side, digging holes and securing saplings. The collaboration turned a routine planting into a civic celebration.
A Day of Parallel Greening Efforts
The boulevard planting was part of a much larger citywide mobilization on the same day. At the Garden of Love, 350 personnel and volunteers bagged 5,000 tree seedlings destined for open spaces across Iloilo. Metro Pacific Iloilo Water and the city’s Greening and Beautification Division joined the effort.
These simultaneous events signal an aggressive push to engineer microclimates that combat urban heat. The 5,000 seedlings will be deployed strategically to parks, plazas, and esplanades. Together, the two projects mark a milestone in Iloilo’s environmental calendar.
Chasing a 30 Percent Green Cover Target
Mayor Raisa Treñas-Chu has set a bold goal of raising the city’s urban green cover from six to ten percent up to the international standard of thirty percent. When she assumed leadership, the canopy was critically thin. The current greening drive directly responds to that deficit.
The city has backed its climate pledges with funding, earmarking six million pesos for Project TRANSFORM. This transdisciplinary program unites corporations, communities, and scientists to reduce disaster risks. The Banaba planting is one visible outcome of that commitment.
A Boulevard Built for Sustainability
Iloilo Sunset Boulevard opened in January 2025 as a 4.9‑kilometer eco‑boulevard connecting Barangay Tabucan to Barangay Cagbang. The 2.261‑billion‑peso project integrated dedicated bike lanes, pedestrian walkways, and viewing decks into its design. Landscaping was prioritized from the start.
The boulevard now serves as a linear park where locals and tourists jog, cycle, and watch the sunset. The new Banaba trees enhance that experience by offering shaded rest spots. The corridor demonstrates how infrastructure can blend mobility with environmental stewardship.
Global Recognition for Local Action
These local greening efforts have placed Iloilo on the international stage. During ASEAN Climate Week 2026, the city was highlighted as a model for translating climate commitments into community-level action. National environment officials have praised Iloilo’s linear parks as a blueprint for resilience.
The Banaba planting reinforces that reputation. Every native tree added to the boulevard tells a story of a city that takes livability seriously. For visitors, the green corridor is an invitation to explore a destination where sustainability is not just a slogan but a lived reality.





