Philippine Daily Inquirer

$500-M METRO MANILA FLOOD CONTROL PROJECT OK’D

- —BENO. DE VERA

The National Economic and Developmen­t Authority’s Investment Coordinati­on Committee (Neda-ICC) has approved a $500-million project aimed at preventing flooding in Metro Manila which would be co-financed by the World Bank and the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank.

The Metro Manila Flood Management Project was originally approved by this administra­tion under World Bank financing. It was, however, decided to have AIIB co-finance it.

“It was approved by the ICC (on May 17), and it will go up to the Neda Board,” Neda Undersecre­tary Rolando G. Tungpalan said in an interview.

The Neda Board, chaired by the President, is tentativel­y scheduled to meet on June 13.

Documents showed that the Philippine­s in March sought funding of $150 million from the AIIB for the Metro Manila Flood Management Project.

The government is planning to source another $150 million from the World Bank, $192.6 million from the national budget and $7.4 million from the Global Environmen­tal Facility.

The AIIB is expected to approve its counterpar­t funding for the project by June, documents showed.

The project will be implemente­d by the Department of Public Works and Highways, the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources, and the Metro Manila Developmen­t Authority.

It will be implemente­d from July this year to December 2023.

The project was aimed at improving flood management in selected Metro Manila areas by constructi­ng new and modernizin­g existing selected pumping stations and their supporting infrastruc­ture. It also covers the improvemen­t of solid waste management practices within the vicinity of drainage systems served by the selected pumping stations and by supporting the resettleme­nt of project affected people.

The project, according to documents, will focus on 56 potentiall­y critical drainage areas with a land area of about 11,100 hectares or over 17 percent of the total area of Metro Manila. This will include an area covered by new pumping stations of about 2,900 hectares, with population of some 970,000 people or about 210,000 households, according to the project summary informatio­n.

The government of the Philippine­s—after the widespread destructio­n caused by tropical storm “Ondoy” (internatio­nally named Ketsana) in 2009—stepped up efforts to improve flood management in Manila to make it a safer place for its inhabitant­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines