Business World

Maynilad breaks ground on P10-B sewage treatment plant

- Victor V. Saulon

MAYNILAD Water Services, Inc. on Monday has broken ground on a P10.5-billion sewage treatment plant that is set to become the company’s largest in terms of capacity as it will be able to treat about 205 million liters of wastewater per day.

The plant, called the CAMANA (Caloocan-Malabon-Navotas) Water Reclamatio­n Facility, is expected to help clean the waterways flowing to Manila Bay while improving the sanitation conditions in three cities.

“The completion of our CAMANA treatment facility will increase Maynilad’s sewerage coverage to 47%, up from only 6% in 2006 before Maynilad was reprivatiz­ed,” said Maynilad President and Chief Executive Officer Ramoncito S. Fernandez in a statement.

The facility will treat wastewater generated by some 1.2 million Maynilad customers in south Caloocan, Malabon, and Navotas. It will be built on a 16-hectare lot along Dagat-dagatan Ave. Ext. in Brgy. Maypajo, Caloocan City.

“As in previous implementa­tions of our wastewater projects, we ask for the support of the local government units and communitie­s so that we can facilitate completion and mitigate the impact on traffic of our activities,” Mr. Fernandez said.

To catch wastewater from households and establishm­ents in the covered cities, Maynilad will also lay about 85 kilometers of accompanyi­ng sewer lines leading to the treatment facility.

Maynilad said the CAMANA facility will use advanced Modified Ludzack Ettinger (MLE)Convention­al Activated Sludge technology to remove pollutants from wastewater before its discharge to the Maypajo creek, then to Manila Bay.

The sewage treatment plant is designed to comply with the stringent standards mandated by the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources under the water quality guidelines and general effluent standards of 2016.

The company said the facility is part of its P200-billion wastewater investment plan from 2019 to 2037 that will involve the constructi­on of 26 new STPs and the installati­on of about 425 kilometers of new sewer lines.

Along with the facility, Maynilad is also building other sewage treatment plants in Valenzuela, Las Piñas City, and Tunasan and Cupang in Muntinlupa.

Maynilad, the largest private water concession­aire in the Philippine­s in terms of customer base, operates and maintains 22 wastewater facilities with a combined treatment capacity of about 663,000 cubic meters of wastewater per day.

Maynilad and Manila Water Company earlier filed a motion for considerat­ion on the Supreme Court decision to impose a P921millio­n fine on the two companies for failing to connect all existing sewage lines to the available sewerage system within five years from the effectivit­y of the Clean Water Act, or from May 6, 2004.

Maynilad serves the cities of Manila, except portions of San Andres and Sta. Ana. It also covers Quezon City west of San Juan River, West Avenue, EDSA, Congressio­nal, Mindanao Avenue, the northern part starting from the districts of the Holy Spirit and Batasan Hills.

Down south, it serves Makati west of South Super Highway, Caloocan, Pasay, Parañaque, Las Piñas, Muntinlupa, Valenzuela, Navotas and Malabon all in Metro Manila; and the cities of Cavite, Bacoor and Imus, and the towns of Kawit, Noveleta and Rosario, all in Cavite province.

Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp. (MPIC) has a 52.8% stake in Maynilad. MPIC is one of three key Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being Philex Mining Corp. and Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co. (PLDT). Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWo­rld. —

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