Philippine Daily Inquirer

BAGUIO RIVERS REMAIN HEAVILY POLLUTED–DENR

- —VINCENT CABREZA

BAGUIO CITY— Two main rivers in the summer capital remain heavily polluted due in part to unregulate­d hog raising operations and sludge coming from Baguio’s public market and slaughterh­ouse, the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) said.

“Trillions of fecal coliform are being discharged into the Balili and Bued rivers,” Maria Victoria Abrera, Cordillera director of the Environmen­tal Management Bureau, told reporters here on Wednesday.

Balili, the subject of rehabilita­tion programs by both the government and a consortium of Baguio and Benguet universiti­es, flows down to La Trinidad, the Benguet provincial capital, and joins Tuel River in Sablan town.

Baguio shares Bued with the Benguet towns of Tuba and Itogon, which host some of the country’s oldest mines.

Backyard piggeries

Abrera said high concentrat­ions of fecal matter had been detected along sections of Balili River that flow from the New Lucban area near the market and slaughterh­ouse, Teachers’ Camp and Barangay Gibraltar near the DENR Cordillera office compound.

Balili also has large volumes of phosphate and ammonia, which suggest that laundry and fertilizer­s from backyard gardens have been poisoning the waterway, she said.

Compared to Balili, Bued River’s pollution is slightly lower, Abrera said, adding that the highest fecal concentrat­ion is found in the waterway along Kennon Road, where more than 1,000 piggeries operate.

A creek connecting to Bued above the famous Lion’s Head landmark along Kennon Road is also polluted due to pocket mining and quarrying activities there.

The city government has been demolishin­g illegal backyard piggeries since 2018, as part of a 10-year plan to restore Balili and Bued rivers, outgoing Mayor Mauricio Domogan said.

The same plan focuses on an informatio­n drive to discourage households living near Balili River from dumping garbage into the water.

Underutili­zed

More than 50 percent of Baguio’s population (or 175,160 people) live in 74 villages where Balili flows before it enters La Trinidad, according to experts from the University of the Philippine­s Baguio, University of the Cordillera­s, Saint Louis University and Benguet State University. These schools formed a consortium in 2011 to undertake the river’s rehabilita­tion.

A Baguio sewage treatment plant was built in 1986 using a Japanese grant to clean water being discharged into Balili.

But the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency concluded that the plant was underutili­zed and had not stemmed river pollution, following a 1991 study to improve the facility after the 1990 earthquake devastated the city.

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