May 30 2012
MANILA, Philippines — There is a real fear that the Philippines, a country surrounded
entirely by water, would not have enough of it in the future.
The Department of
Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) said a scarcity of water could pose a
problem for the Philippines, which would be grappling with polluted water
sources and stresses like population growth and development.
The DENR will host later
this week the country's first international river summit in Iloilo City. Some
900 scientific experts and river managers from around the Philippines and other
countries are expected to discuss the effective management of rivers and river
basins.
Environment Secretary Ramon
Paje said the country had 421 principal river basins and, as an archipelago,
had control over 479 billion cubic meters of ground and surface water.
Paje said that
theoretically, this should be enough to sustain the country's economic
development and ecological needs at any given time, yet stresses posed by
population growth resulting in increased economic activity and pollution could
mean "the danger of a scarcity of water supply."
Stressors such as water
pollution due to improper waste disposal and sedimentation from indiscriminate
land development, the over-extraction of water resources, and flooding in
low-lying areas had led to poor water quality in many countries. Various
government agencies are also in conflict when it comes to water management, he
said.
"In many places around
the world, rivers act as convenient dumping grounds for waste. Many of these
rivers, once teeming with aquatic life, are now either biologically dead or
dying," he said.
"We all need to accept
our responsibilities as stewards of rivers not only as waterways or water
sources but also as habitats and ecosystems, and be willing to undertake the
laborious and continuing task of reviving and maintaining them, he said.
Vicente Tuddao Jr.,
executive director of the DENR's River Basin Control Office, had said that the
country had an abundant water supply, thanks to groundwater sources, various
inland water bodies and regular rains. But this was not being used in the most
efficient manner. Many major tributaries and basins were either polluted or
deforested, he said.
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