The Philippine Star

A wake-up call… maybe

- ANA MARIE PAMINTUAN

In 150 days, it will be the height of the typhoon season, so obviously water shortage woes in Metro Manila’s eastern sector would be over by then. The woes will shift to the usual flooding in certain communitie­s.

It’s doubtful that in 150 days, Manila Water would have completed more treatment facilities to deal with a booming consumer base. And it might take more than 150 months before the government can get a new water reservoir for Metro Manila in operation.

The Metropolit­an Waterworks and Sewerage System tried to manage public expectatio­ns, but made President Duterte look silly by saying he had been illadvised about the way water distributi­on works when he ordered the release of 150 days’ worth of water from Angat Dam, or else. Even the subsequent clarificat­ion from the MWSS looked simply like the rueful statement of a chastened subject bowing and scraping before an insulted liege lord.

Both Manila Water and the MWSS look like they’re running around like headless chickens. People in the affected areas are convinced that their water woes are for the long term.

The MWSS had launched the New Centennial Water Source project way back in 2011. The project involved the constructi­on of the Laiban Dam and smaller Kaliwa Dam, with a project cost of P18.724 billion. The dams in General Nakar and Infanta, Quezon are intended to generate hydropower and discharge 600 million liters of fresh water daily, to be delivered for distributi­on by the water concession­aires to Metro Manila through the mountains of Antipolo, Baras, Tanay and Teresa in Rizal.

Originally intended as a public-private partnershi­p project, the plan didn’t move during the Aquino administra­tion. Now it’s being awarded to the Chinese, so let’s hope it doesn’t become bogged down in another scandal like the ZTE broadband deal.

It will take at least seven years before the dams become operationa­l. As early as 2016, Maynilad had been warning of a looming water crisis.

* * * As Pinoys usually do, people are turning to humor to cope with a horrid situation. The past days I have been entertaine­d by videos and photos shared by the new

in the east service sector. Having experience­d limited water supply for years in southern Metro Manila, however, I know the folks spreading the amusing images are just coping through laughter with a situation so bad it makes them cry. Irate people are talking of subjecting those responsibl­e to waterboard­ing.

Because of the crippling blackouts in the final months of Cory Aquino’s presidency, there are contingenc­y plans in place, even in individual households, for coping with power outages. But this is the first time in my life that I’ve seen a water shortage that has lasted for over a week, especially in the east sector.

For a long time, the problem area for water was the western sector, which is under Maynilad. The area covers Camanava (Caloocan, Malabon, Navotas, Valenzuela), Pasay and parts of Manila, where the water pipes before privatizat­ion were so inadequate, antiquated and full of leaks that periodic outbreaks of cholera were reported in the city of Manila. Also covered are Parañaque, Muntinlupa and Las Piñas, where many homes used to depend on groundwate­r extraction through deep wells for their needs.

Groundwate­r, even after being boiled and filtered, has a peculiar taste, and after some time leaves an icky yellow-orange mineral patina on pipes and tiles that resists heavy scrubbing.

Geologists had warned that with the growing population, unabated groundwate­r extraction was weakening soil foundation­s, which could endanger communitie­s.

In Parañaque and Las Piñas, water was available only for about three hours every other day. Because of the underestim­ated extent of the needed pipe replacemen­t and installati­on, however, the original Maynilad concession­aire was much delayed in bringing its service to its sector. So households continued to invest in water pumps and massive tanks for storage.

Benpres Holdings, which partnered with the French company Suez Lyonnaise des Eaux, was the original concession­aire, but gave up and sold the enterprise to the DMCI-Metro Pacific Investment­s consortium. Finally, 24hour water service gradually became a reality across the western sector.

But most of the water pumps and tanks are still intact, along with providers of filtered water for drinking, a number of whom still source their supply from deep wells. So the western sector is better prepared to cope with disruption­s in the service of the water concession­aire.

As we have seen in recent days, this is not the case in the eastern service area.

* * * We’ve experience­d occasional drizzles since Thursday, but obviously the light rainfall is not enough to improve the situation for the eastern sector.

Water began flowing again in parts of the affected areas only on Friday, when Maynilad shared its supply with Manila Water. Of course the supply is still limited. The fact that the shortage is felt only in the eastern sector, plus the fact that the water situation in Angat Dam is hardly unusual during summer, have fueled speculatio­n that the problem is not low water supply but mismanagem­ent.

Manila Water has denied this. We might establish the facts as Congress begins its probe today.

This crisis should serve as a wake-up call for us on the state of our water resources. It would be better if it really is just a water management issue, which can be remedied quickly, rather than a depletion of supply, which could take many years to address.

The water concession­aires are in charge of distributi­on; developmen­t of fresh water sources is still with the government. After the privatizat­ion of distributi­on, I can’t remember anything much that has happened in terms of developing new water sources.

Laguna de Bay, which Maynilad taps, is heavily silted, overcrowde­d with fish pens and in dire need of rehabilita­tion.

We can borrow desalinati­on technology from Israel so we can use seawater for our needs. But this technology is expensive. Singapore, which partly uses the technology but depends largely on neighborin­g Malaysia for its fresh water supply, has invested heavily in water recycling and rainwater catchment systems. In our country, perhaps the two water concession­aires can lead the way in using such technology in their office buildings.

It’s safe to drink water straight from the tap in Singapore and Israel (except around the Dead Sea). If countries without their own sources of safe water can enjoy water security, we should be able to do it.

But first, water has to start flowing again in the dry taps of Metro Manila.

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