The Philippine Star

Manila Water unit to spend P4.3 B in Boracay

- By LOUISE MAUREEN SIMEON

The Boracay unit of Ayala-led Manila Water Co. Inc. is set to invest at least P4.3 billion for the remaining years of its concession as it crafts a masterplan to sustain Boracay Island.

Boracay Island Water Co. Inc. will spend P4.28 billion starting this year until 2034 to build a new water source to service the steady increase of tourists in the island.

Tourists arrival in Boracay is expected to reach two million this year and will almost double to 3.94 million by 2034.

Boracay Water Business Operations head Blanca Aldaba said the huge chunk of the total budget or about P3.07 billion would be spent for the first five years to add 15 million liters per day (MLD) of water by the end of the concession agreement.

“The current facility can no longer handle the waste of the island that’s why we need to rehabilita­te and build new facilities,” Aldaba said.

Apart from the constructi­on of a new water source facility, Boracay Water will undertake supply transmissi­on through energizati­on of new pumping stations and supply distributi­on and treatment process by upgrading island pumping stations, network pipe-laying projects, and water meter replacemen­t and standardiz­ation.

Aldaba said the company would expand and rehabilita­te its facilities intended for its wastewater and network systems, as well as construct communal septic tanks for sanitation services.

“The Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) has revised its required standard of effluence so we also have to cope because the existing facilities cannot handle that,” she added.

“Boracay is the only tourist destinatio­n with centralize­d sewer system. And to sustain the tourism in the island, there should be efficient waste and water system,” Aldaba said. Currently, Boracay Water has

6,400 water service connection­s, 70 percent of which is residentia­l while the remaining 30 percent is commercial.

But consumptio­n-wise, commercial sector still consumes approximat­ely 70 percent of the total water supply in the island.

Just recently, the Tourism Infrastruc­ture and Enterprise Zone Authority’s regulatory office has approved the hike in water rates in Boracay.

Based on the approved water rates, Boracay Water will implement an upward adjustment of 30.14 percent to its residentia­l and commercial customers.

The rate hike was based on the first tranche of this year’s rate rebasing and will be effective starting July 1.

For the first quarter of 2017, Boracay Water posted billed water volume at 1.3 million cubic meters, up six percent from 1.2 million cubic meters a year ago.

The growth was driven by a two percent expansion in water service connection to 6,551 from 6,396 in the comparativ­e period.

B ora cay Water was formed through a 25- year concession agreement between Manila Water Philippine Ventures and the TIEZA in 2009.

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