Balansag, M.Devibar, J.Santos, B.Egnar, C.Peduche, G.Ramos, G.Descallar, M.Mendoza, E.Catacutan, Delia C.Duque-PiƱon, Caroline2016-04-192016-04-1920083648_RUPES_Lantapan.pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/10919/68211Lantapan, in the Manupali watershed of the Philippines, exemplifies tension between rapid economic growth and environmental degradation. The diverse stakeholders, namely farmers, banana plantation companies, local government officials and politicians, national irrigation administrators, irrigators, and the national power corporation learn that with proper negotiation and incentives, hostile confrontation on the emerging water crisis can be avoided.application/pdfen-USIn CopyrightParticipatory processesBiodiversityWater managementPayments for environmental servicesLand use planningForest ecosystemsSmall-scale farmingWaterPovertySustainable agricultureConservation incentivesIrrigationAgroforestryAssociationsWater useRiparian ecosystemsStakeholdersIrrigationIncentivesWater rightsBiodiversity conservationPESSmallholdersWatershedSite profile: RUPES LantapanTechnical report