Philippine Daily Inquirer

P85-B MWSS project: Same river, different plan

Gov’t to undertake project to head off possible water shortage in NCR

- By Niña Calleja

THE METROPOLIT­AN Waterworks and Sewerage System (MWSS) may be eyeing the same river as the one cited in the controvers­ial P52-billion project of the previous administra­tion, but an agency official stressed that the latest proposal to build dams in Tanay, Rizal is going to be a fresh take on efforts to resolve the looming water crisis in Metro Manila.

“The design of our proposed dam is different from the previous Laiban project, although they are at the same location,” Nathaniel Santos, senior deputy administra­tor of the MWSS, said in reference to the undertakin­g proposed during the time of President Macapagal-Arroyo.

The latest government plan is called the New Centennial Water Source project. Officials refused to consider the plan a “revival of the Laiban dam project,” as they tried to distance themselves from the controvers­ial undertakin­g that had since been scrapped.

Estimated to cost P85 billion, the latest project will involve the constructi­on of one main dam at the upper Kaliwa River in Laiban and another regulating dam downstream, minimizing the threat of a water shortage in Metro Manila expected over the next 20 years, Santos said in an interview last Friday.

According to a recent study of the University of the Philippine­s National Engineerin­g Center, which was commission­ed by the MWSS, Metro Manila may experience a shortfall of about 1,900 million liters per day (MLD) by 2037, taking into account the population boom and the unabated urban developmen­t.

Santos said that, unlike the one huge dam in the previous Laiban project, the two dams to be constructe­d in Rizal would have the capacity to adequately address the estimated shortage.

At present, Metro Manila sources 97 percent of its water needs from the Angat Dam in Bulacan.

The lower dam would be the first to be built and, once completed, would be utilized right away while the main dam is being constructe­d.

In 2009, San Miguel Corp. led by Eduardo “Danding” Cojuanco submitted an unsolicite­d proposal to the government to construct the P52-billion Laiban dam.

That project drew flak from various groups, believing that the project would be undertaken in secret and could lead to an increase in water rates, while indigenous residents in the area would be forced off their land.

“This project now is prepared by the government. After the feasibilit­y study, it will be subject to open and competitiv­e bidding,” Santos said.

Once approved by the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority board chaired by President Aquino, the project would be rolled out by the second half of the year. Constructi­on will start in January 2014 and is expected to be completed in March 2020.

MWSS has contracted a transactio­n advisor—a consortium of firms that include Rebel Group Internatio­nal BV, Allen and Overy, Crisil Risk and Infrastruc­ture Solutions, Royal HaskoningD­HV and Puyat Jacinto & Santos Law, to conduct the feasibilit­y study and structure the public-private partnershi­p agreement.

The firms have already conducted ground surveys in the municipali­ties of Tanay in Rizal, Infanta, General Nakar and Real in Quezon.

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