Manila Bulletin

Manila Bay rehab comes next

- By ELLALYN DE VERA-RUIZ

The Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) is preparing to rehabilita­te Manila Bay using the same ambitious strategy that restored Boracay Island to its pristine condition.

Manila Bay is known for its beautiful sunsets but its waters are considered the most polluted in the country due to domestic sewage, toxic industrial effluents from factories and shipping operations, and leachate from garbage dumps, among others.

DENR Secretary Roy Cimatu said he is keen to have Manila Bay rehabilita­ted, restored, and maintained to a level fit for swimming, skin diving, and other contact forms of recreation.

“We are preparing for an all-out strategy to bring the coliform concentrat­ion in Manila Bay to a safe level so that millions of people who reside in the bay region and neighborin­g areas will enjoy its waters and marine resources without fear of getting sick,” Cimatu said.

He added that the DENR

hopes to replicate what has been achieved in Boracay which, prior to undergoing six-month rehabilita­tion, was described as a “cesspool” by no less than President Rodrigo Duterte.

The DENR chief said the government will show the same level of political will in cleaning up the bay that spans three major regions — National Capital Region (NCR), Central Luzon and CALABARZON — as it did in Boracay, a tiny island in Western Visayas.

A 2017 report by the DENR’s Environmen­tal Management Bureau showed that the fecal coliform level in Manila Bay reached as high as over 330 million most probable number (MPN) per 100 milliliter­s. The safe level is only 100 MPN/100ml.

According to Cimatu, part of the DENR’s strategy is to ensure compliance with environmen­tal laws among all local government units (LGUs) surroundin­g Manila Bay.

“I am calling on all LGUs to step up their efforts in cleaning up the bay because it is their own constituen­ts who will benefit (from a rehabilita­ted Manila Bay),” Cimatu said.

He revealed that a Manila Bay Command Center under the DENR-NCR would be created to oversee the zonal operations of four field offices to be set up in six coastal cities of Metro Manila, namely: Malabon-Navotas, Manila, Pasay-Parañaque, and Las Piñas.

These field offices would be manned by personnel who will closely coordinate with city or municipal environmen­t officers to ensure that cleanup activities and programs are being carried out and sustained.

To address problems on human waste arising from the presence of informal settlers along the bay, DENR is looking at technologi­es that would treat water of pollutants, whether directly discharged into the bay or through toilets.

Cimatu said DENR would also seek assistance from law enforcemen­t agencies in going after violators of environmen­tal laws, especially those who discharge untreated wastewater into the bay.

In 2008, the Supreme Court issued a continuing writ of mandamus ordering 13 government agencies to clean up Manila Bay and restore its water quality to Class SB, or safe for recreation­al activities such as swimming.

Class SB waters are also suitable for commercial propagatio­n of shellfish and as spawning areas for milkfish and other similar species. (Ellalyn De Vera-Ruiz)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines