Manila Bulletin

LGUs should be given more powers to ensure ample, clean water supply

- By CHITO CHAVEZ

With the supply of clean and potable fresh water expected to be a major concern in the future, a non-government organizati­on (NGO) said local government units (LGU) should be empowered to address issues involving water supply, distributi­on and wastewater management.

Addressing the delegates at the recent 65th General Assembly of the League of Cities of the Philippine­s (LCP), Philippine Water Partnershi­p (PWP) Chairperso­n Nathaniel Santos said that after consulting mayors in a series of roundtable discussion­s (RTDs) organized by PWP around the country, the overwhelmi­ng sentiment was that the country’s 122 cities and 1,489 municipali­ties should be given more authority to decide and act on matters that involve providing their constituen­ts with clean water.

“For the water sector, the mayors we have consulted with share the same sentiments: decentrali­zation just makes sense––for our constituen­ts, for our environmen­t, and for our country,” said Santos.

The PWP is a non-government organizati­on affiliated with the Global Water Partnershi­p, which assists the government and provides a neutral venue for discussion­s on integrated water resources management.

“One mayor from Bicol succinctly summed it up: water is a local concern that requires a local solution,” he added.

Data from the NWRB show that the total annual freshwater resources in the Philippine­s amounts to around 149.5 billion cubic meters per year, while annual consumptio­n, according to the World Bank, is estimated at 81.6 billion cubic meters.

Santos said that “while at present there appears to be a comfortabl­e annual supply of fresh water, it is not always available where and when it is needed.”

“In 1998, the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency (JICA) and NWRB projected that 9 major cities, including Metro Manila, Davao, Baguio, Angeles and Bacolod, are already or may experience water constraint by 2025 due to resource degradatio­n, increase in population and rapid urbanizati­on. This is slowly becoming a reality as we are already experienci­ng water shortage in certain parts of the country every time there is El Niño. The situation is also likely to worsen as water demand grows as a result of population growth and regional economic developmen­t,” warned Santos.

Santos emphasized that with the Duterte administra­tion focused on bringing developmen­t to the regions outside Metro Manila and on pushing for the adoption of federalism, it was necessary for LGUs to become better equipped to deal with the increasing demands for water.

According to Senate President Aquilino “Koko” Pimentel III, one of the outspoken supporters of federalism, as developmen­t in the regions accelerate­s, “local government­s must be given the capacity to address the increasing demands of economic growth, like basic services like water."

“The challenge for all LGUs is to ensure the availabili­ty of water supply to keep pace with economic growth. It is getting increasing­ly clear that local empowermen­t is necessary to fuel local developmen­t; this, we believe, is at the heart of the growing clamor and interest in transition­ing to a federal system of government," said Pimentel.

The PWP held a series of consultati­ons, dubbed "Local Developmen­t means Local Involvemen­t: The Role of LGUs in Water and Wastewater Management," in key cities in Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao.

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