The Philippine Star

DENR calls for sewage facilities installati­on in tourist destinatio­ns

- By LOUISE MAUREEN SIMEON

The Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) is calling for the crafting of a plan for sewerage and septic systems in tourist spots as part of the government’s cleanup of major destinatio­ns.

“We need to invest in sewage systems while we still can so that these places can avoid the problems faced by Boracay today. It is better to build sewage treatment facilities now than face a catastroph­e later,” Environmen­t Secretary Roy Cimatu said recently.

He said local government­s should take advantage of the National Septage and Sewerage Management Plan under which cities and first-class municipali­ties can avail themselves of a 50-percent grant from the national government to help build their sewerage systems.

“The grant is there, but there are no takers because there are no ben- efits for them,” Cimatu said.

Although many tourism spots are neither in cities nor in first class municipali­ties, the DENR is still willing to help address the issue.

“We really need to think of how we can help these local government units build their own septic and sewerage systems, instead of relying on the local water suppliers to do this, which might pass on the constructi­on costs to the people’s water bills,” he said.

Tourist attraction­s, such as some municipali­ties along the Taal Volcano Protected Landscape region and in Palawan, are examples of places that might need help with sewerage systems.

In the case of Boracay, the DENR estimates that around 17.5 million liters of wastewater are generated on the island every day.

Of this volume, only about half is treated properly. About 30 to 40 percent of the untreated wastewater comes from private homes, while the rest is said to come from business establishm­ents.

“Boracay has two sewage treatment plants, but it is not yet enough to cover the entire island. About 834 out of some 2,600 businesses on the island have been identified as dischargin­g wastewater without proper treatment,” Cimatu said.

The DENR mission team has started its work to rehabilita­te Boracay. The team has been divided into six groups and is surveying different areas of the island, looking for violations such as missing environmen­tal compliance certificat­es and failure to connect to sewage treatment plants.

“We are doing a saturation drive of all establishm­ents this week. The aim is to plug the biggest leaks and to find out where the untreated water comes from,” Cimatu said.

And while Boracay is facing the challenge of cleaning up wastewater, the environmen­t chief noted that the island’s sewerage management could be a model for other tourist spots.

The island’s water concession­aire, Boracay Island Water Corp., is a partnershi­p between the Department of Tourism’s Tourism Infrastruc­ture and Enterprise Zone Authority and Ayala Corp.’s Manila Water Co. Inc.

“Boracay is actually ahead of the curve when it comes to sewage treatment, but the challenge now is to ensure that the entire island is connected to it. Hopefully we can do that by 2020 or 2022,” Cimatu said.

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