Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

NLEX Flooding Leads To So-Called Filipino Resiliency

Here is another story that, on its face, seems like a tale of resiliency. A tale of overcoming the odds. But a peep behind the curtains reveals the rot at the bottom. 

https://mb.com.ph/2025/07/22/vendors-sell-instant-noodles-biscuits-to-stranded-motorists-in-nlex

The Filipinos' entrepreneurial spirit will always prevail, even during calamity situations.
At the height of heavy rains spawned by the southwest monsoon along the stretch of the North Luzon Expressway (NLEX) near the Mindanao Avenue exit, vendors sprouted and started selling instant noodles and biscuits to motorists and their passengers who were stranded in the flooded expressway.
A video posted by a netizen showed vendors offering cup noodles for P50 and biscuits for P30. They were also seen carrying pots of hot water to cook the noodles with.
The uploader said they were stranded for seven hours, prompting many to buy food just to get by.
The incident drew mixed reactions online. 
Some praised the vendors for helping people in need, while others criticized the prices as too high.
One netizen said, “Still, thanks to them. Your goods were a big help.”
“That’s the right thing to do—better than gambling or doing something wrong. It’s much better to work hard the right way. Great job, guys. Kudos to you!,” another commented.
Heavy rains from the southwest monsoon (habagat) have led to major flooding and traffic in Metro Manila.

There are two aspects to this story that need to be broken down. 

1. The flooding along NLEX. Built between 1968 and 1989, the NLEX is geared to handle lots of traffic. But it appears they did not build flood solutions into the roads. 

https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/topstories/metro/953432/nlex-working-closely-with-gov-t-agencies-lgus-on-long-term-flood-solutions/story/

NLEX Corp., the operator of the North Luzon Expressway, on Tuesday said it is working closely with relevant government agencies and local government units (LGUs) to provide long-term solutions to the flooding as adverse weather conditions brought by Typhoon Crising and Southwest Monsoon (Habagat) rains rendered the major thoroughfare impassable for several hours.

In a statement, NLEX Corp. said safety remains its top priority as it encouraged motorists to monitor official weather bulletins and avoid non-essential travel during this time.

The toll roads operator said that on July 21, 2025 continuous rains brought by Crising and the Southwest Monsoon caused the surrounding rivers and creeks in Valenzuela and Meycauyan to overflow. 

“It resulted in flooding at certain portions of NLEX, despite the continuous operations of pumping stations,” the company said.

“These led to the temporary closures of Balintawak Cloverleaf and the Valenzuela Northbound and Southbound portions, including several expressway entry and exit points,” it said.

NLEX Corp. said it immediately deployed teams to monitor the situation, assess water levels, and provide on-site assistance. 

Patrol and emergency teams were mobilized to open U-turn slots and redirect vehicles to safer routes, it added.

“At around 8 p.m., both directions at the Balintawak Cloverleaf were passable to all types of vehicles,” the company said.

NLEX Corp. said it provided drinking water and snacks to assist stranded motorists. 

Why are they working on long time flood solutions now? Shouldn't they have done this earlier? Everybody knows the Philippines floods during the rainy season. 


https://mb.com.ph/2025/07/22/very-old-drainage-system-hampers-metro-manila-flood-controldpwh

The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) on Tuesday, July 22, raised concern over Metro Manila’s flood control capability, saying the region’s “very old” drainage system is no longer sufficient to handle the volume of rainwater during heavy downpours. 
DPWH Secretary Manuel Bonoan said nearly 70 percent of the capital region’s drainage network can no longer channel floodwaters to pumping stations, even though these facilities remain fully operational. 
“The pumping stations are working. The problem is, floodwaters can’t flow to them because the drainage system is not adequate to convey floodwaters,” Bonoan said, noting that much of the system is outdated and heavily silted. 
He also cited that areas previously not prone to flooding, including Commonwealth Avenue in Quezon City, are now experiencing water buildup due to clogged inlets and disconnected waterways. 
A comprehensive assessment by the DPWH showed that the region’s drainage network can no longer cope with present-day rainfall levels. 
In response, the department has partnered with the World Bank to update Metro Manila’s flood management master plan 
The updated plan includes the rehabilitation of 32 existing pumping stations and the construction of two additional facilities in the Metro Talon area. 
While operations and maintenance are under the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA), the DPWH is leading infrastructure improvements. 
“This has to be done immediately. It’s only the start of the rainy season, and already we’re seeing serious flooding issues,” Bonoan said. 
The agency will also review MMDA’s report attributing flooding along Commonwealth Avenue to the ongoing construction of the MRT-7 station. 
Bonoan said technical recommendations will be issued following a detailed assessment. 
Meanwhile, more than 20,000 residents across 55 barangays in Quezon City were evacuated due to severe flooding caused by garbage-clogged drains and rising waters from the San Mateo, San Juan, Tullahan, and Meycauayan rivers. 
Quezon City spokesperson Peachy de Leon said the city’s drainage system was overwhelmed by improperly disposed garbage and the overflowing La Mesa Dam, which contributed to flooding in several low-lying communities. 
To address long-term flood risks, the DPWH is pursuing the Pasig-Marikina River floodway program, which includes the construction of retarding basins and potential flood-control dams to manage runoff from the Sierra Madre mountain range. 
Bonoan said President Marcos has directed a “holistic approach” to flood mitigation, integrating engineering solutions with land use planning, environmental protection, and solid waste management. 
“Flooding is not just an engineering problem. It’s also a problem of environment, land use, and garbage. We need an all-of-government strategy,” Bonoan added.

The real reason the pumps are not working is because of garbage. That is a government problem.  They know garbage is being littered and they wait until flooding happens?

2. Filipino resiliency. 

This is the second part of the article.  Filipinos sell food to stranded motorists. Why?  Well, because they need money. But if they had jobs that paid they would not need to risk thier lives by wading through floodwaters to make a few pesos. This so-called resiliency is often paraded as a virtue when in fact it is indicative of the dire straits in which some people live. 

https://opinion.inquirer.net/177869/stop-romanticizing-resilience

Resilience is the most abused and overused term to describe what helps Filipinos survive calamities. The word has started to sound like a backhanded compliment because being resilient for many simply implies that it is the only way for them to survive difficult situations in the absence of long-term, sustainable solutions.

As Albay Rep. Joey Salceda found out when he wrote on his Facebook page in a now-deleted post, “Good day Global Albay. We are resilient,” resiliency is no longer viewed positively especially when it only exposes and highlights the abject failure of the government to address perennial problems such as heavy flooding during typhoons. And then there was Camarines Sur Rep. LRay Villafuerte who said residents in his jurisdiction—one of the areas hardest hit by Severe Tropical Storm “Kristine”—were already “accustomed” to typhoons.

Kristine dumped two months’ worth of rain in several provinces affecting 2.3 million Filipinos; over 40 have been reported dead and about 250,000 displaced. The Department of Agriculture estimated damage to crops amounting to P143 million. Many areas including Cavite, Quezon, Samar, and Bicol have been placed under a state of calamity. No one should be accustomed to such disasters.

That the Philippines is the most disaster-prone country in the world has been established by the World Risk Index, which has ranked it at the top for the third consecutive year due to its exposure and vulnerability to natural disasters, as well as the lack of coping and adaptive capacities. But aside from these factors, Katrin Radtke, a senior researcher specializing in disaster preparedness at the Ruhr University Bochum in Germany, said poverty and high levels of corruption hugely contribute to the country’s risk ranking.

As Kristine battered Luzon and the Visayas, viral social media posts laid bare the plight of many Filipinos: desperate appeals for help by affected residents trapped in their homes or forced to climb to the roof to escape the rising floods, many more braving waist-deep or even deeper waters to save family, property, or pets—scenes reminiscent of many previous typhoons that had hit the country. At one point, Bicol’s Regional Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council announced that its rescuers could no longer respond to the numerous calls for rescue due to the shortage of rubber boats and advised residents to look for safe areas (“humanap muna ng puwedeng ligtas na lugar”). Even President Marcos said he felt a “little helpless” and that all the government could do was “sit tight, wait, hope, pray that there’s not too much damage, that there are no casualties.”

The government, given the resources it has at its disposal, is the last institution that should feel helpless. It has billions of funds allocated for projects that are meant to avoid the very situations Filipinos found themselves in during the onslaught of Kristine. But, as cited in last Tuesday’s editorial, an Oxfam report has found that 70 percent of funds meant for mitigating disasters are almost untouched. This reflects the reactionary mindset prevalent among government officials, which must change.

Resilience is not bad in itself, but only when there are established systems that prepare communities for disasters, prevent them from suffering huge losses, and help them restore and rebuild stronger for future extreme events. The government must take decisive action and shift its disaster risk reduction and management (DRRM) policy from being reactive and hyper-focused on relief and rescue to one that is proactive and aimed at mitigation. This could include tapping technology to help communities anticipate the amount of rainfall and determine hazardous and flood-prone areas, provide vulnerable households with survival kits, and build better flood-control infrastructure, stronger dwellings, and permanent shelters so there won’t be any need to resort to using schools or basketball courts as temporary evacuation centers.

It must also stop development projects that are destructive to nature, specifically, forests and mangroves, which act as shields against typhoons and tsunamis. Sierra Madre, for example, an Isabela official believes, spared the province from the brunt of Kristine’s wrath. This makes the protection of mountain ranges and forests from denudation and deforestation of paramount importance.

Filipinos are not helpless either. In the coming midterm elections, they can choose to vote for leaders who have clear environmental platforms. Do they have sound DRRM plans or will they ride their version of Noah’s Ark to distribute cash to their desperate constituents in the middle of the floods to cover up for the lack of disaster preparedness? Ecological issues are as equally important as economic matters and those running for public office must be scrutinized on where they stand on them. This vicious cycle that enables politicians to exploit and romanticize people’s resilience must end.

Resiliency says less about the people and more about the corrupt government which does little to prevent very preventable calamities such as flooding.

Wednesday, March 29, 2023

41% of All Filipino Families Lack Access to Clean Water

March 22nd was World Water Day which is an annual United Nations observance to highlight the importance of fresh water. In the Philippines almost half of all families lack access to fresh water. Let's take a look at some statistics compiled by National Water Resource Board executive director Dr. Sevillo David Jr.

https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/03/20/23/11-million-filipino-families-lack-access-to-clean-water-nwrb

Some 11 million families lack access to clean water in the Philippines, an official said on Monday. 

These families are forced to rely on "unprotected" deep wells, springs, rivers, lakes and rainwater, said National Water Resource Board executive director Dr. Sevillo David Jr.

(Almost 11 million families do not have access to clean water yet. The water source for 11 million families is almost unsafe.)

The Philippines is home to some 26.3 million families, according to 2020 government data.  

Lack of sanitation has also forced some families to defecate in the open, risking water contamination and diseases, David said. 

11 million out of 26.3 million is 41%!!!  Do these people pay taxes? Those taxes should go to projects like providing fresh water but they have been left out in the cold by the government which they are forced to support. Open defecation does indeed taint the water supply and I have gone through the stats showing how many people die each year from diarrhea due to tainted water. One wonders how Filipinos survived for thousands of years before the Spanish came. Did Lapulapu take a dump near his water source?  

Water supply also often becomes an issue during the dry season, he noted.

(We have enough water supply for now. But the PAGASA says El Niño is looming.) 

El Niño is characterized by below-normal rainfall conditions, which could lead to dry spells and droughts in some areas of the country, according to the state weather forecaster. 

(We need to prepare for this as it could affect our water supply, particularly in our farms.)

Asked what the government is doing to solve water issues, David cited President Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos' order to create a water resource management office.

(This office will be in charge of coordinating various government agencies which have water programs and activities. More than 13 agencies have a role or have a program on water and our President wants to have coordination to provide security and relief to the needs of our countrymen.)

David's statement comes days before World Water Day, celebrated every March 22 to raise awareness on the water and sanitation crisis. 

Of course the government's answer is more bureaucracy.  Let's take a look though. 

https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/02/01/23/marcos-oks-new-water-resource-management-office

President Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. has approved the creation of an office that will manage water resources and ensure sufficient supply, Malacañang said on Wednesday. 

Marcos suggested that the new Water Resource Management Office's (WRMO) first task "should be reducing the country’s reliance on groundwater and deep wells, as well as managing surface water supply," the Presidential Communications Office said. 

"We have sufficient... there’s enough water in the Philippines hindi lang natin ginagamit, tinatapon natin,” Marcos said.

(It's not being used, we're wasting it.)

The new body will also ensure that other agencies would follow a plan for waste management. 

"That’s why we have to strengthen the mandate of the Water Management Office. We have to bring them (agencies) together so that they are all following the overall plan,” Marcos said. 

"This new Water Management Office, it has to be cohesive in the sense that kailangan ‘yung recommendation ng management office sinusundan," he added. 

(The recommendation of the management office should be followed.)

Who is distributing the water now? Who is not following the overall plan now? This is all malarky. Marcos wants to create another bureaucracy which won't do anything except cost the taxpayers more money and be another conduit for corruption. But the question remains. How did Filipinos survive on clean water before the Europeans came and why can't they do that now? Almost half of all Philippine families do not have access to clean water and the government's response is to create another bureaucracy? Ridiculous!

Wednesday, November 18, 2020

Old Man in Leyte Outperforms Government By Planting 10,000 Trees

One old man in Leyte is doing more for typhoon disaster prevention and environmental protection than the inutile Philippine government.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1121468

For eight years now, a 65-year-old man in Matalom, Leyte has planted about 10,000 mangroves along a coastal area at the back of his house.

Gary Dabasol, jobless, has been planting mangroves in Punong village because he was worried of the danger of big waves especially during typhoons.

In doing so, he just gathered mangrove seedlings along the coastline in their village. Among the mangrove species that he planted include miyapi, pagatpat, and bakawan.

“I'm glad that I was able to inspire people, I hope that they will also follow what I am doing. I also want to contribute to higher marine production by cultivating a spooning area for fish, crabs, and shrimps and other species," Dabasol said in an interview on Wednesday.

The story of Dabasol was shared by netizen Dan Niez from Hilongos town, who visited the coastal area of Matalom last week to unwind.

Niez said the last time he went to the area several years ago, the place was just an open space along the shoreline.

He was surprised that during his visit last week, there are full-grown mangroves planted along the coastline.

“When I posted it, many people reacted especially millennials and praised Tatay Gary for what he did. I think they were inspired, and I hope they are inspired because planting 10,000 mangroves is not that easy,” Niez said.

“I hope that the government will also help him because what he did is extraordinary. It is not usual for one person to have this kind of initiative," Niez added.

Right now there has been typhoon after typhoon hitting the Philippines and the Senate and everyone else are wondering what can be done? This man is showing what can and should be done to prevent flooding during a typhoon. Doing a Google search for "philippines deforestation floods" and thousands of results show up. Here is one from 2005:

https://www.philstar.com/nation/2005/11/10/306119/deforestation-one-major-causes-rp-floods

"If FAO/CIFOR concluded that in those countries deforestation is not a cause of flooding, such findings do not hold true in the Philippines where forest degradation has gone from mild to severe, from 70 percent forest cover in 1900 to barely 18 percent in 1998," said Anabelle Plantilla, executive director of Haribon Foundation (www.haribon.org.ph), the country’s foremost environmental non-government organization in the forefront of issues for more than three decades. 

According to Norman Myers, author of the Primary Source, Tropical Forests and Our Future (1992), "the forests exert a sponge effect, soaking up moisture before releasing it at regular rates… The multi-storied structure of the forest, together with its vast amount of foliage, helps break the impact of a tropical downpour." 

He added that "the region where deforestation is most advanced is Southern-Southeast Asia, and it suffers (from) floods that increase in rage and intensity year by year." 

It seems as if nothing has been done as 15 years later conservation groups are calling for the same thing: reforestation.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1361520/group-says-protection-of-forests-must-be-core-of-disaster-response

Restoration and conservation of the Philippines’ existing forests, from rainforests to mangrove forests, should be at the core of the country’s disaster risk reduction plans, according to the Asean Centre for Biodiversity (ACB).

Noting that deforestation caused massive flooding in Cagayan Valley due to Ulysses, Transportation Secretary Arthur Tugade on Sunday said planting trees would soon be mandatory for public transport cooperatives and individuals seeking franchises or licenses.

In a meeting with President Duterte and other Cabinet officials, Tugade said a regional director of the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) had suggested that members of cooperatives must plant 500 trees before being granted a franchise.

He said the Department of Transportation (DOTr) was closely coordinating with the Department of Environment and Natural Resources and local government units in identifying areas for reforestation.

Transportation Secretary Tugade says it will be mediator for public transport cooperatives and individuals seeking franchisee to plant 500 trees before they are granted a franchise. Where will these trees come form? The Department of Agriculture? The DOA donated 1,500 trees for the local INC to plant back in 2017 and those trees are all dead now because nobody maintained them. Who will maintain the trees these franchise seekers plant? 

Even if these groups plant 500 trees each it will likely all go to waste somehow. Maybe the Philippines needs less government programs and more men like Gary Dabasol. Look at what he did all by himself.



https://www.facebook.com/nowinleyte/posts/225676302223133

All it takes to succeed it initiative and determination. The government could do these kinds of things too but they don't. That is a result of more red tape and corruption.

Thursday, February 1, 2018

Iglesia Ni Cristo Tree Planting Is A Total Failure

Six months ago I published an article about Iglesia Ni Cristo engaging in a tree planting activity in the area.
https://philippinefails.blogspot.com/2017/08/iglesia-ni-cristo-plants-trees-and.html
They bussed in a few hundred people some from at least two hours away telling by the destinations written on the jeepneys in which they arrived. All morning they busily planted little saplings. 


This is the field in which they planted their grove. It's hard to tell but in the background are many, many more bamboo sticks protecting tiny saplings. They must have planted at least a hundred saplings in this field. By noon they were gone and apparently they never came back to tend to the trees because today, 31 January, 2018, this is what the field of trees looks like:


Where is the mini-forest? Where are the hundreds of saplings they planted?  Here is a close up.


These trees look like overgrown underbrush. Many of them are even choked and tangled by weeds. In fact all the trees are practically indistinguishable from weeds!


One or two of them look fairly robust and like they might make it but that is purely a chance occurrence and not because anyone has been tending to them.  


What a complete waste of time it was to bus out hundreds of people to plant trees when no one even bothered to follow up on them. There is an INC congregation in the squatters village where they planted these trees so there is no excuse that someone was not assigned to tend to these saplings. A few bamboo sticks were lying about broken but no sign of the saplings they were protecting.




What was the point of this activity? All around the world the INC goes out and plants trees. What for? Do they think they are noble environmental champions? How is bussing in people from two hours away to plant trees no one will care for a good thing for the environment? Bussing them in means more pollution in the air and more energy wasted. The saplings the INC killed through neglect could have flourished in someone else's hands and field. And let's not forget about the litter they left behind which was not an environmentally friendly thing to have done. There were more people than trees planted which means bussing in hundreds was completely unnecessary and only done for the photo-op. If the INC cares about the environment why not just have the local congregation plant and care for the saplings? Because pictures and video of hundreds of people congregating for a tree planting activity is good PR.

This neglected field of weedy trees is very much reflective of the soul of the Iglesia Ni Cristo which is a spiritually bankrupt organisation feeding its members only lies and heresies.

I cannot speak for their efforts elsewhere but this tree planting activity is a total failure.