Philippine Daily Inquirer

DENR cites gains in bay cleanup

- —STORY BY JHESSET O. ENANO

Chief Justice Diosdado Peralta on Sunday sounded bowled over by the transforma­tion of a cleaned-up Manila Bay. The song “What A Wonderful World” now best describes the once heavily polluted bay, Peralta said. Environmen­t Secretary Roy Cimatu, however, said the level of fecal coliform made the bay still unsafe for swimming. He had earlier promised it would be fit for swimming by the end of 2019.

The waters of Manila Bay, worldfamou­s for its sunset, have shown signs of improvemen­t a year after the environmen­t department and other government agencies launched a drive to clean up what has been called a “gigantic septic tank.”

Officials touted Baseco Compound, a huge slum by the bay in Tondo, Manila, as one of the biggest triumphs of efforts at restoring the old glory of the bay, where Commodore George Dewey destroyed the Spanish Pacific Squadron during the Spanishame­rican War.

Not too long ago, the water at the shoreline of Baseco was filled with trash—from plastic food packaging and sachets to used diapers.

Now, the sand underneath the water is finally visible, after months of consistent cleanup activities led by the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) and village officials.

High court mandamus

Saying he was “impressed” by the agencies’ efforts, Chief Justice Diosdado Peralta said this was the first time he had seen the continuing mandamus issued by the Supreme Court in 2008 actually being implemente­d in the bay.

Acting on a petition filed in 1999 by residents of the bay— University of the Philippine­s law students and colleagues of environmen­t lawyer Tony Oposa, the high court ordered 13 agencies to clean up and protect the body of water.

The 1,994squarek­ilometer bay has a coastline of 190 km and is bounded by Metro Manila and the provinces of Cavite, Bulacan, Pampanga and Bataan.

But much remains to be done in cleaning up the bay, Environmen­t Secretary Roy Cimatu said on Sunday, the first anniversar­y of the “Battle for Manila Bay” cleanup campaign.

Levels of fecal coliform, or bacteria from human and animal feces, are still at thousands to millions most probable number per 100 milliliter (mpn/100 ml), although this was a significan­t decrease compared to previous levels that reached billions.

Drop in fecal coliform levels

Before the rehabilita­tion program, the DENR said it aimed to reduce the fecal coliform level of the bay from 330 million mpn/100 ml to a more acceptable 270 mpn/100 ml by end of 2019.

The safe level for water quality is pegged at 100 mpn/100 ml.

While Baseco Beach has shown huge improvemen­t visually, environmen­t officials said it was still not safe to swim in.

While levels of coliform from three monitoring stations in Baseco still fluctuate, it still had high levels, with the lowest reaching around 30,000 mpn/100 ml, said Jacqueline Caancan, executive director of DENR National Capital Region.

But children found no problem skinny dipping into its murky brown waters on Sunday, paying no attention to the stink still emanating from the bay.

“They will feel bad when you tell them off,” said Diana Espinosa, chair of Baseco Compound. “When it was still dirty, they were already swimming there. Now that it’s clean, how will we tell them not to do so?”

While Cimatu had promised that Manila Bay would be swimmable by end of 2019, he said the timeline had been pushed back due to delays in constructi­ng flood control projects in the baywalk area.

Treatment plants

Officials are now pinning their hopes on a new solarpower­ed sewerage treatment plant on Roxas Boulevard—a project of the Metropolit­an Manila Developmen­t Authority.

With six main treatment tanks, the plant is expected to treat 500,000 liters of wastewater daily.

The untreated water will come from three drainage outfalls, namely Padre Faura, Rajah Soliman and the Manila Yacht Club. Once flowing straight to the bay, the outfalls will be diverted by a 1.5-km pipe stretching from the US Embassy to the yacht club.

The plant is expected to be fully operationa­l by March.

Yet even without the treatment plant, Cimatu said recent data from the Environmen­tal Management Bureau already showed that coliform levels from these outfalls had “drasticall­y decreased.”

For instance, the count at Padre Faura outfall is now down to 920,000 mpn/100 ml, from its prerehabil­itation level of 7.21 million mpn/100 ml.

At the Rajah Soliman drainage, levels went down from 35 million mpn/100 ml to 11 million mpn/100 ml.

Cimatu said some 40,000 informal settler families within the Manila Bay region would be relocated within the year.

Relocation of slums is part of the second phase of the rehabilita­tion plan for Manila Bay.

“Before, no one really believed that Manila Bay can be cleaned,” Peralta said. “My wife suggested that the theme song of Baseco was ‘Impossible Dream’ because it is impossible to clean.”

“But now, it’s ‘What A Wonderful World,’” the chief magistrate said, referring to Baseco’s transforma­tion.

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 ?? —MARIANNE BERMUDEZ ?? Roy Cimatu
—MARIANNE BERMUDEZ Roy Cimatu

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