The Philippine Star

Gov’t pushes P839 B water infra projects

The government is pursuing P839 billion worth of projects to boost the country’s water resources in a bid to fuel economic developmen­t.

- By LOUISE MAUREEN SIMEON

During an investment forum organized by the UK government yesterday, Finance Undersecre­tary Catherine Fong maintained that water remains an overlooked resource in the world.

“Many of our communitie­s still suffer from a lack of potable water while others endure the devastatin­g effects of flooding year after year due to climate change,” Fong said.

She said there is a need to urgently address such challenges by forging sustainabl­e solutions through investment­s in surface water sources in partnershi­p with the private sector.

Under the Build Better More program of the government, there are 44 infrastruc­ture flagship projects aimed at boosting water resources, with an indicative cost of P839.13 billion.

This is part of the bigger P8.78 trillion in total infrastruc­ture projects that the administra­tion wants to pursue.

Of the 44 water resource projects, the biggest is the P115.05-billion Central Luzon Pampanga River Floodway Control Project that covers the constructi­on of a 56-kilometer floodway channel.

The project is under preparatio­n and will be funded through official developmen­t assistance (ODA). It is likely to be completed after the Marcos administra­tion.

This is followed by the P102.21-billion Parañaque Spillway Tunnel Project, which would drain excess lake water from Laguna de Bay into Manila Bay through an undergroun­d drainage channel.

It will be funded via Japanese loan and awaits government approval.

Other big projects include the Ambal Simuay and Rio Grande de Mindanao River Flood Control and Riverbank Protection Project and the Davao City Flood Control and Drainage Project.

Much of the projects would be funded by the national budget as well as ODA from China, Japan and South Korea and multilater­als Asian Developmen­t Bank, World Bank and Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank.

Implementi­ng agencies include the Department of Public Works and Highways, Metropolit­an Waterworks and Sewerage System and the National Irrigation Administra­tion.

Fong said the Department of Finance (DOF) is refining the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprise­s Act to better address concerns and tailor-fit incentives for more strategic investment­s.

“Many of our communitie­s still suffer from a lack of potable water while others endure the devastatin­g effects of flooding year after year due to climate change.”

To improve the entire water system, the DOF is also pushing for the passage of a law creating the Department of Water Resources.

“At present, there are over 30 agencies that manage the country’s water resources. Their overlappin­g functions result in disjointed planning and uneven quality execution,” Fong said.

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