The Philippine Star

Palace vows measures to avert water crisis

- By ALEXIS ROMERO

Malacañang yesterday vowed to institute measures to address the “water crisis” in Metro Manila after National Security Adviser Hermogenes Esperon Jr. warned that the problem would persist unless long-term programs designed to develop new water sources are implemente­d.

Water concession­aires Maynilad and Manila Water announced rotational interrupti­ons last week due to the drop in water levels at Angat and Ipo dams.

The decreasing water elevation, caused by lower-than-normal rainfall, forced the utilities to implement water rationing in affected areas.

“We will find ways so the crisis won’t worsen. If there is a problem, there is a solution. So I think those people responsibl­e for that will have to do their jobs,” presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo said in a radio interview.

Panelo noted that it was not the first time the metropolis experience­d a water shortage.

“If you recall, it has been addressed before. Perhaps there is a new problem,” he said.

Last Friday, Esperon cited the need for the government and the water concession­aires to develop other sources of water to prevent shortages in the future.

Lawmakers, for their part, are rushing the creation of a new department that they are hoping can solve the recurrent water supply problem.

The House of Representa­tives expects to pass the bill creating the

Department of Water Resources (DWR) in January, according to Albay Rep. Joey Salceda, one of the authors of the measure.

He said the new department would be responsibl­e for formulatin­g comprehens­ive and integrated policies and programs on water, as well as managing the ownership, appropriat­ion, developmen­t, use and protection of the country’s water resources.

“It will ensure the optimal use of water for domestic, commercial, hydropower, irrigation, sanitation, industry, navigation, recreation, fisheries and aquacultur­e. It will be tasked to implement Presidenti­al Decree 1067 and Republic Act 9275 or the Water Code and Clean Water Act, respective­ly,” Salceda said.

He added that there would be a Water Regulatory Commission under the proposed DWR that would regulate distributo­rs of water for household, commercial or industrial use.

Salceda lamented the present state offices that have to do with water have “overlappin­g and fragmented management and regulation of water resources and services.”

“(This) hinders the developmen­t of a comprehens­ive, integrated and doable long-term solution to address keen competitio­ns, imbalanced resources utilizatio­n and conflict of interest among water users, especially in areas already identified as waterstres­sed,” Salceda said.

Inhumane increase

Sen. Imee Marcos, for her part, called on the two water concession­aires to reveal their master plan to ensure stable and steady water supply for their customers as stipulated in their contracts with the government over 20 years ago.

She said the two firms have been reliant on rains to fill the dams that provide water to their respective systems but they have been tasked in their concession agreements in 1997 to implement a master plan that would ensure steady supply even during drought.

“The MWSS (Metropolit­an Waterworks and Sewerage System) has given these companies a very long time, so they should have thought of ways not to inconvenie­nce and cause trouble to our countrymen, especially our hospitals that need ample supply of water,” Marcos said.

She noted that under the concession agreements, the MWSS gave the two firms 37 years to rehabilita­te and repair the water and sewerage systems in the two zones even as they were tasked to look for long term and stable water sources or put up reservoirs.

The two companies provide services to over 16 million people.

Buhay party-list Rep. Lito Atienza said the two water concession­aires have been raking in as much as P5.3 billion annually for the last 13 years.

He said they should not threaten to make water rates skyrocket if they are forced to comply with the Clean Water Act.

“Based on our scrutiny of publicly available financial filings, we’ve gathered that Manila Water Co. and Maynilad Water Services Inc. raked in an aggregate of P138 billion in net profits from 2006 to June 2019,” Atienza said.

He said the two water suppliers in Metro Manila do not have the right to threaten government as well as consumers on the basis that they are “definitely not having any difficulti­es producing profits for their stockholde­rs.”

“Both firms also rewarded their shareholde­rs a combined P49 billion in cash dividends over the same period,” Atienza said.

Last week, Sen. Christophe­r Go warned the two concession­aires not to burden their customers further, including passing on to them costs that the concession­aires should shoulder.

Go said Duterte was enraged over the recent developmen­ts, including the threat of the Ayalaowned Manila Water to raise its rates by 780 percent.

Go said there was water flowing in the taps in areas in Metro Manila where there were reports of water shortage.

He also called on water suppliers not to pass the burden to the people and to resolve issues as indicated in their contracts.

“Don’t pass the burden on our people. You got into that business, so that is your responsibi­lity. Don’t sign contracts if you can’t comply with supplying water,” Go said.

Senators Sherwin Gatchalian and Aquilino Pimentel III also opposed the plan of the east zone concession­aire to raise rates if the Supreme Court does not reverse its ruling imposing a P921-million fine for not complying with the Clean Water Act.

“Increasing rates by 780 percent is unconscion­able and downright a highway robbery. No business in the world earns 780 percent in profit. Government regulators should never allow this inhumane increase,” Gatchalian said.

Asked why Manila Water is passing on its consumers the penalty the government imposed on them for water shortages, Gatchalian said it was not the consumers who have been remiss in their obligation­s and violated the law.

He said Manila Water should be the one to shoulder the penalty for its wrongdoing­s.

Pimentel said transferri­ng a fine onto consumers was not only unfair “but also utterly baseless.”

He said customers are suffering from poor water services, and a planned increase would burden them even more.

“The people should not be the one to pay for their environmen­tal violations. It must be noted that consumers already suffered from the month-long water interrupti­on last June,” Pimentel said.

He said the private owners of the water concession­aires must bear the cost of their penalties, this being the nature of the business they entered into.

“Less or no profit for them this time. Their profits are not guaranteed by their customers. They must run their businesses profession­ally, ethically, and lawfully,” Pimentel said.

Last April, Duterte scolded officials of the MWSS for supposedly failing to prepare for El Niño and assailed what he described as “rich guys” who tried to profit out of the water crisis.

Duterte also accused water utilities of not doing their jobs and threatened to terminate their contracts.

Asked to react to water concession­aires’ plan to hike rates, Panelo said: “All of these are being studied by the President and he will undertake steps to fulfill his promise that there should be no water crisis in the country.”

Panelo denied that the water supply issue is just a front to push the controvers­ial P12.2-billion Kaliwa Dam project. He said the project is being investigat­ed but could not provide updates on the investigat­ion.

Some local officials and civil society groups have claimed that the Chinafunde­d Kaliwa Dam would cause floods and displace communitie­s in Quezon province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines