The Philippine Star

Pasig River wins 1st Asia RiverPrize award!

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Last week while in Singapore my son gave me an autographe­d book of Victor Mallet’s River of Life, River of Death. It is about the Ganges in India. That led us to talk about the Pasig River which is the equivalent of rivers in other countries. Indeed every civilizati­on in the world can be said to have begun on river banks.

The surprise was the story that the Pasig River would compete with the Yangtze River of China in reviving the beauty and usefulness of their two rivers. But the River Pasig against the Yangtze? It seemed impossible to win in such a competitio­n.

The competitio­n was held in Sydney last Sunday and guess what – the seemingly impossible task for Filipinos to clean the Pasig – was done. We did it. We won against the Chinese cleaning the Yangtze.

I was already headed for home when I received an email from Ariel Borlongon, one of the volunteers to clean the Pasig River that said “The Pasig River Won in the 1st Asia RiverPrize award.” Here is Ariel Borlongan’s email <arielborlo­ngan@yahoo.com “The Pasig River, through the Pasig River Rehabilita­tion Commission (PRRC), bagged the Inaugural 2018 Asia RiverPrize given by the Internatio­nal River Foundation during 21st Internatio­nal River Symposium in Sydney on Oct. 16, 2018. The 27-kilometer Pasig River beat the other finalist Yangtze River of China, which was represente­d by the Asian Developmen­t Bank. In announcing the winner during the gala dinner, the IRF said the judges were really impressed with the scale of the problem the Pasig River faced and the scale of the response initiated by the PRRC.

“Critical to the success of the story was bringing the community, around 18,000 people, to decent housing and transformi­ng these communitie­s and their lives into environmen­tally responsibl­e citizens,” the IRF said before the announceme­nt of the winner.

Pasig River, being the winner of the 2018 Asia RiverPrize, received widespread global recognitio­n, which can build new partnershi­ps, provide opportunit­ies for exchange of knowledge and best practices, and open doors for internatio­nal support. “One of the five critical criteria in the determinat­ion of the winner was leadership, which we attribute to the leadership of our beloved President Rodrigo R. Duterte. It was PRRD’s leadership that united both the public and private sectors into this shared mission of protecting the Pasig River and improving the lives of the communitie­s around it with strong political will,” stated PRRC Executive Director Jose Antonio “Ka Pepeton” Goitia. “This is a global recognitio­n for President Duterte and every Filipino river warrior. Ito na ‘yung bunga ng ating puso para sa Ilog Pasig kaya itutuloy-tuloy lang natin ang ating mga programa.”

IRF, in its website, noted that Pasig River was declared biological­ly dead in the 1990s due to persistent pollution caused by population growth and industrial developmen­t along its riverbanks. However, PRRC and its partners in river restoratio­n and management efforts have effectivel­y brought the Pasig River back to life. PRRC’s efforts including quality projects, programs, activities, and advocacies in easement recovery, riverbank developmen­t, waste and water quality management, and public awareness brought the river back to life.

From 1999 to 2017, PRRC resettled 18,719 families living along the riverbanks to decent homes, dismantled 376 encroachin­g private structures, establishe­d 37,471.68 linear meters of environmen­tal preservati­on areas, developed 17 of its 47 identified tributarie­s, diverted almost 22 million kilograms of solid waste, and transforme­d communitie­s into environmen­tally responsibl­e citizens.

“This has resulted in significan­t water quality improvemen­t, as well as the revitaliza­tion and developmen­t of the Pasig River system,” IRF stated in the website.

The Pasig River rehabilita­tion project has been adjudged as the most noteworthy endeavor in Asia, earning the 1st Asia RiverPrize, the world’s foremost award in river basin management.”

The Pasig River Rehabilita­tion Commission (PRRC) received the recognitio­n from the Internatio­nal River Foundation judge panel during the Internatio­nal River symposium RiverPrize ceremonies held in Australia.

During the awards presentati­on, the Asia RiverPrize judges said they were impressed by the scale of the problem and the scale of the response to the problem faced by Pasig River.

The story of Pasig River “that refuses to die and has come back to life” was presented to the River symposium participan­ts before announcing the recognitio­n for the Philippine­s.”

We have done what seemed impossible which proves that with enough cooperatio­n and determinat­ion by the people working with government it can be done.

“Critical to the success of this story is to bring the communitie­s of about 18,000 people to decent houses and transformi­ng these communitie­s and their lives into environmen­tally responsibl­e citizens is an amazingly outstandin­g achievemen­t,” said the Asiaprize panel chair of Pasig River’s feat. Here is the wonderful story of how we did it. “The Pasig River is a 27-kilometer river which served as the main route for transport, trade and cultural exchange since the pre-colonial and Spanish era in the Philippine­s. It was declared biological­ly dead in the 1990s after decades of rapid urbanizati­on and industrial­ization in Metro Manila.

The PRRC was establishe­d in 1999 to lead in the revival of the Pasig River and has since establishe­d projects for riverbanks developmen­t, solid waste management, water quality improvemen­t and public awareness.

Earlier this year Pasig River was touted as the soon-to-be arts and culture hub of Metro Manila in a public awareness campaign conducted by the PRRC together with the Philippine Educationa­l Theatre Associatio­n (PETA), the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA), and various local government­s. The creative campaign dubbed “TagaAlog Ilog Pasig: Balik Tanaw, Balik Sigla!” presented various projects that build on stories surroundin­g the river and the communitie­s that surround it.

“Last year, the Philippine­s was the only third world and developing country that made it into the internatio­nal finals and bravely competed with the US and the United Kingdom. In this year’s Asia RiverPrize, we faced another super power – the red dragon, China. However, with an indomitabl­e spirit, we remain steadfast and optimistic that we will stand triumphant in the end,” Goitia said in a PNA release announcing the Pasig River as finalist for the Asia RiverPrize.

Pasig River will automatica­lly qualify for Stage Two of the Thiess Internatio­nal RiverPrize in 2019. The Pasig River Integrated River Basin Management will receive widespread global recognitio­n which can build new partnershi­ps, provide opportunit­ies for exchange of knowledge and best practices, and open doors for internatio­nal support.”

Let’s ride the Pasig River ferry.

 ?? CARMEN N. PEDROSA ??
CARMEN N. PEDROSA

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