Business World

Manila Water sees no service interrupti­ons after augmenting supply

- By Alyssa Nicole O. Tan

MANILA Water Co., Inc. said it is not currently implementi­ng any water service interrupti­on schemes, after a Senator said the dry season should not be used as a pretext to discontinu­e services.

“Water supply for the East Zone remains normal and we are not implementi­ng any off-peak or rotational water interrupti­ons,” Manila Water Corporate Strategic Affairs Group Head Nestor Jeric T. Sevilla, Jr. said in a Viber message to BusinessWo­rld.

He said Manila Water can tap additional sources to cater to increased demand during the dry months. These include the Cardona Water Treatment Plant, which can produce up to 100 million liters of water per day (MLD), deep wells with output of about 115 MLD, and the Marikina Portable Water Treatment Plant which can add 20 MLD.

“We continue to maximize our distributi­on reservoirs, reduce our water losses to 13%, as well as install line boosters to ensure water reaches the elevated and farthest points of our service area,” Mr. Sevilla said.

Senator Mary Grace S. PoeLlamanz­ares, who chairs the chamber’s Committee on Public Services, said the water concession­aires in the capital region should not use the dry season as a pretext for imposing water service interrupti­ons.

Maynilad Water Services, Inc. Corporate Communicat­ions Head Jennifer C. Rufo had said the water interrupti­ons that were supposed to end in April may extend to May due to the increased demand.

“We expect our water concession­aires to deliver on their commitment­s under their renewed franchise and revised concession agreement, and complete the projects necessary to have safe and reliable water on the taps,” Ms. Poe said.

“It would be a disservice to fail our people in their most basic need at this time of struggle to recover from the pandemic,” she added. “Complacenc­y certainly has no place in these back-to-back threats.”

Ms. Rufo told BusinessWo­rld in a Viber message that water interrupti­ons at night give the company the opportunit­y to fill up its reservoirs in preparatio­n for daytime peak demand.

“Hence, we can sustain water service during hours of the day when it is needed most, minimizing inconvenie­nce to customers,” she said, noting that the service interrupti­ons will likely run from 10 p.m. to 4 a.m. when most customers are asleep and not using water.

The need to manage supply in the network comes from the increasing demand for water due to hotter days, Ms. Rufo said.

“If it appears, based on our projection­s, that the demand is still likely to deplete our reservoirs without this interventi­on, then we extend the implementa­tion of these daily off-peak interrupti­ons for another 15 days,” she added, advising customers to consistent­ly store clean water during the dry season.

Ms. Rufo confirmed that Maynilad also has several supply augmentati­on measures, including the activation of deep wells and operation of modular treatment plants, which allow them to keep the service interrupti­ons within off-peak hours.

Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp., which has a majority stake in Maynilad, is one of three Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT, Inc.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has an interest in BusinessWo­rld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls.

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