NATION

NSTW 2025 turns Ilocos Norte into northern hub of scientific innovation

Jasper Dawang

LAOAG CITY, Ilocos Norte — From the halls of SM Laoag to the wide dome of the Centennial Arena, the 2025 National Science, Technology, and Innovation Week (NSTW) has transformed Ilocos Norte into the country’s northern hub for scientific discovery — a place where researchers, communities, students, and innovators gather to explore how science shapes daily life and the nation’s future.

NSTW, established through Proclamation No. 2214 in 1982, remains the Philippines’ premier celebration of scientific progress. This year’s theme, “Siyensya, Teknolohiya at Inobasyon: Kabalikat sa Matatag, Maginhawa, at Panatag na Kinabukasan,” reflects a clear vision: that innovation is a key partner in building a resilient and secure tomorrow for all Filipinos. The celebration also underscores its sub-theme, “Building Smart and Sustainable Communities,” emphasizing that science is no longer confined to laboratories — it is a force woven into agriculture, livelihood, disaster resilience, local governance, and sustainability efforts across the archipelago.

At the Laoag City Hall Auditorium, visitors explored two pillars of innovation: Wealth Creation and Wealth Protection. Technologies that strengthen MSMEs, support digital transformation, and drive industry competitiveness stood alongside climate and disaster risk reduction tools, including flood monitoring systems, hazard maps, and early warning technologies. The launch of DOST’s Water Compendium further highlighted the agency’s ongoing work in water management, a crucial issue for both drought- and flood-prone areas.

Agriculture, a major lifeline in Ilocos Norte, gained strong attention with the presentation of LGU partners implementing SARAI technologies — digital tools for crop monitoring, climate analytics, soil and water management, and science-based farming decisions. Meanwhile, the Community Empowerment through Science and Technology (CEST) Forum showcased ground-level stories of how STI interventions have improved livelihoods, strengthened health and education, and enhanced disaster preparedness in various communities. Outstanding local governments were recognized for effective implementation and measurable impact.

Science also became tangible in Laoag City with the turnover of a bamboo waiting shed — built using research-backed methods for durability and sustainability. The structure demonstrated how material science and green engineering can influence everyday community spaces.

Throughout the province, NSTW 2025 highlighted one unifying message: science is no longer distant or abstract. It is present in the decisions of farmers using climate data, in the digital upgrades of small businesses, in the hands of weavers crafting modern fabrics, and in the resilience of communities preparing for disasters.

By bringing NSTW to Ilocos Norte, DOST made innovation accessible, relatable, and rooted in local reality. The celebration underscores that the future of the Philippines is not only imagined through scientific vision — it is built through the everyday application of science in communities willing to embrace change.

In Ilocos Norte, NSTW 2025 stands as a testament to how Filipino ingenuity, backed by science, can pave the way for a smarter, stronger, and more sustainable nation.