Philippine Daily Inquirer

Pollution, squatting, industries hasten death of Laguna de Bay

- By Maricar Cinco @maricarcin­coINQ

(Last of three parts)

BIÑAN CITY— Bayani Enriquez, 54, grew up by Laguna de Bay in this city in Laguna province. Back in the 1980s, he often spent time with friends swimming or fishing in the lake’s unobstruct­ed waters.

But much of the open space is now gone, with shanties occupying the shoreline, he said. It also never occurred to him how the lake, which gave him some sense of calm and security, would become a public hazard.

On Sept. 26, 2009, Tropical Storm “Ondoy” (internatio­nal name: Ketsana) hit parts of southern and central Luzon, dumping an unusually heavy amount of rainfall (455 millimeter­s) within a 24-hour period.

It was midday. Enriquez and his wife were going to market when rampaging floodwater­s met them outside their subdivisio­n. In less than an hour, the water rose waist-high. “It’s the worst I’ve seen,” Enriquez said.

Laguna de Bay was swollen and virtually kept several lakeshore towns and cities in the provinces of Laguna and Rizal, and Metro Manila flooded for months. More than 400 people died and 400,000 lost their homes.

‘Ondoy’ wake-up call

The massive flood was a wake-up call to the government. At the height of the storm, the water level in the lake rose to 13.9 meters (the normal level is 10 meters). This was the highest since 1972 when the water level reached 14 meters during a storm and submerged most parts of Taguig City. The highest ever recorded was 14.62 meters in 1919.

Then President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo decided to make rehabilita­tion of Laguna de Bay a “presidenti­al priority.”

Toward the end of her term, Arroyo entered into an P18.5billion lake rehabilita­tion project with a Belgian company, Baggerwerk­en Decloedt en Zoon.

The project was supposed to cover the dredging of the 7-kilometer Napindan Channel (the lake’s only outlet to Manila Bay), dredging of a 70-km nautical channel, constructi­on of 12 ferry stations, and rehabilita­tion of wetlands around the lake.

But what would have been one of the country’s “most ambitious” flood control projects fell through after President Benigno Aquino III took office in 2010 and ordered the deal shelved.

In a 2011 technical report, Malacañang said the areas to be dredged, in just a matter of three years, would end up silted again because of heavy deforestat­ion and soil erosion.

Expressway dike project

Instead, Aquino announced in 2014 his administra­tion’s supposedly biggest public-private partnershi­p: the P122.8-billion Laguna Lakeshore Expressway Dike Project.

The dike would not only serve flood mitigation purposes but also create a 47-km expressway between Taguig City and Los Baños town in Laguna and reclaim about 700 hectares of land around the lake.

But this, too, did not materializ­e after the prequalifi­ed bidders—Trident Infrastruc­ture and Developmen­t Corp. (composed of Ayala Land Inc., Megaworld Corp., Aboitiz Equity Ventures Inc. and SM Prime Holdings Inc.), San Miguel Holdings Corp. and Alloy Pavi Hanshin LLEDP Consortium—backed out.

The bidding eventually failed and not a single flood control structure was built.

Rapid rehabilita­tion

In his first State of the Nation Address in July last year, President Duterte said he wanted issues on watershed destructio­n, land conversion and pollution in Laguna de Bay abated.

Mr. Duterte handpicked environmen­talist and mining opponent Gina Lopez to head the Department of Environmen­t Natural Resources (DENR), the agency that supervises the Laguna Lake Developmen­t Authority (LLDA).

But Lopez is not very much interested in dredging and dikes, said environmen­tal lawyer Ipat Luna, environmen­t OIC undersecre­tary for legal affairs.

“You’ll be spending like P11 billion to P18 billion, only for the silt to pile up again after a few months. She (Lopez) does not see that as a long-term solution,” Luna said.

A former board member of the private Taal Lake Conservati­on Center in Batangas province, Luna was tapped by the DENR for a multisecto­ral rapid rehabilita­tion plan for the next six years.

LLDA master plan

This plan sits alongside the LLDA’s 10-year Laguna de Bay Basin Master Plan 2016 (an updating of the 1995 master plan) described by Luna as “more technical [and] less inclusive.”

“[T]he objective of this plan is to make a huge and observable dent in the major problems of the Laguna Lake,” Luna said.

“It’s a little more strategic in the sense that more sectoral help … is needed,” she said.

The plan identifies key issues that need immediate interventi­on. These are the overcrowdi­ng of fish pens, illegal reclamatio­n, industrial pollution and domestic sewage, proliferat­ion of water hyacinth, and sedimentat­ion.

“[But] I think an urgent thing to do is to [conduct] a study to see what really is the carrying capacity [of the lake]—not just [in terms] of fish cage absorption but how much agricultur­al runoff and domestic sewage goes into the lake,” Luna said.

During the dry season, the lake’s average depth is 2.5 meters (4 meters during the wet season). This is much lower than what it used to be several decades ago when the average depth was around 8 meters, Luna said.

According to the LLDA, the rate of sedimentat­ion increased from 1.03 centimeter­s per year in 1938 to 1.20 cm/year by 1997. This means that at the rate it is going, the lake could become shallower by another meter in the next century.

On top of those, illegal reclamatio­n contribute­s to the shallowing of the lake.

In 2015, the LLDA filed 21 cases in the Taguig City Regional Trial Court against local gov- ernments for reclaiming portions of the shoreland. The total shoreland area covers 14,000 ha, of which 9,200 ha are in Laguna province, 3,670 ha in Rizal, and 1,130 ha in Metro Manila.

Sabo dams

To arrest the rapidly increasing sedimentat­ion, Luna said the government planned to build sabo dams around the lake.

Sabo dams are concrete structures meant to control debris and large amount of soil flowing into the lake.

Lopez is also considerin­g an “extensive bamboo greenbelt” to absorb excess agricultur­al runoff and create greenery amid the lakeshore slums, Luna said.

The strategy is not exactly new. Edgardo Manda, then LLDA general manager, rolled out in 2008 a bamboo program to reforest denuded areas and riverbanks.

The LLDA opened two bamboo nurseries in Calauan and Lumban towns in Laguna and had planted 327,235 seedlings as of 2015.

Ecotourism

“Ecotourism is really a function of rehabilita­tion,” said Nereus Acosta, current LLDA general manager. “How can you open up areas of the lake or the mountains in Sierra Madre, or Talim Island, if the state of degradatio­n makes it unattracti­ve?”

About 15 million people live within the lake basin, all the way up the Marikina watershed. Living on the shoreland are about 4.16 million people, most of them informal settlers without proper sewage facilities.

“The estimate is that at least half a million [people] are dischargin­g raw sewage into the lake. The rest of them [may have] septic tanks but [these] are not maintained and [are therefore] dislodging raw sewage [into the water],” Luna said.

At least 80 percent of the pollution load comes from domestic waste, Acosta said.

Water quality is consistent Class C (the highest category, Class A, is potable), meaning it is suitable only for fisheries and recreation, he said.

Toxic pollutants

There are, however, indicators that the water quality in the west bay (with the highest concentrat­ion of illegal settlers) is already falling below standard, and heavy metals and toxic pollutants are present in the water.

Acosta said the Philippine­s lacked an integrated sewerage system.

In Europe, where there is an integrated sewerage system, he said “not a single drop of urine goes into Lake Geneva.” The same goes for Lake Michigan in the United States.

While big water concession­aires Maynilad and Manila Water Co. Inc. are providing wastewater treatment services, they only cater to concession areas or only about 15 percent of lakeshore communitie­s, Acosta said.

Industries, while required to have their own primary sewage treatment facilities, also violate laws.

In 2015, the LLDA filed charges against 163 companies (out of 5,882 companies monitored) for water pollution.

That same year, two establishm­ents—a fast-food restaurant and a salon—were issued cease-and-desist orders for violating the effluent standards for wastewater discharge.

No relocation

But rather than resort to a massive resettleme­nt program, the government intends to keep the settlers where they are now and build medium-rise houses for them around the lake.

Luna said the DENR planned to implement “strategica­lly efficient and low-cost technologi­es,” like the use of compost toilets, biochar (charcoal used as soil enhancer), and wetlands to control septage.

She said the remaining empty spaces on the shoreland would be planted with bamboo, “so even if it looks like a slum now, creating greenery will control the sewage discharges.”

“It will be prettier and you will have ecotourism,” Luna said.

Under the National Sewerage and Septage Management Program (as mandated by the Clean Water Act of 2004), local government­s should have their own treatment facilities or at least ensure that households are connected to piped sewerage by 2020.

In Laguna, only towns with slaughterh­ouses and the bigger cities own treatment facilities. In Rizal, except for San Mateo, a concession area of Manila Water, none of the lakeshore towns has its own treatment facility.

“I’m so frustrated that we’re building so many roads like there’s no tomorrow (yet) we’re not building septage tanks. That’s just like putting on makeup without taking a shower first,” Luna said.

Lake death

“One thing that people have to understand is that all lakes have a life cycle. The more rain carves into the soil and pushes that soil into the lake, the faster it will go. Eventually, all lakes will die,” she said.

It is now a matter of “delaying considerab­ly” the deteriorat­ion for the lake to be used for generation­s to come, she said.

Presented with the government’s solutions, fish pen operators and fishermen welcomed the interventi­ons but cast doubts on their implementa­tion.

Charlie Tan, a fish pen operator at Binangonan town in Rizal, said the aquacultur­e industry could coexist with ecotourism ventures with traders willing to invest in restaurant­s or resorts around the lake.

But Fernando Hicap of Pambansang Lakas ng Mamamalaka­ya, a national group of fishermen, said the government should prioritize the welfare of poor fishermen over business and ecotourism.

Acosta said: “To have a business-as-usual attitude and approaches [in solving the problems of Laguna de Bay] is just really going to be unsustaina­ble.”

An urgent thing to do is to [conduct] a study to see what really is the carrying capacity [of the lake]—not just [in terms] of fish cage absorption but how much agricultur­al runoff and domestic sewage goes into the lake Ipat Luna OIC Undersecre­tary for Legal Affairs, DENR

 ?? —PHOTOS BY REMZAMORA ?? TROUBLEDWA­TERS With the Metro Manila skyline as backdrop, fish pens are among the serious threats confrontin­g Laguna de Bay for decades.
—PHOTOS BY REMZAMORA TROUBLEDWA­TERS With the Metro Manila skyline as backdrop, fish pens are among the serious threats confrontin­g Laguna de Bay for decades.
 ??  ?? DIRTY DIP Children enjoy a dip in the lake, seemingly unmindful that it has become a giant septic tank of lakeshore communitie­s.
DIRTY DIP Children enjoy a dip in the lake, seemingly unmindful that it has become a giant septic tank of lakeshore communitie­s.

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