No To Kaliwa Dam, Yes To Alternative Sources of Water
No To Kaliwa Dam, Yes To Alternative Sources of Water
No To Kaliwa Dam, Yes To Alternative Sources of Water
NO TO KALIWA DAM,
YES TO ALTERNATIVE SOURCES OF WATER
“In the heart of this world, the Lord of life, who loves us so much, is always
present. He does not abandon us, he does not leave us alone, for he has united
himself definitively to our earth, and his love constantly impels us to find new
ways forward. Praise be to him!” (Laudato Si, 245)
Our country has been blessed by God with an abundance of natural resources
especially water, but for many factors, we are now faced with the concrete reality of
managing our water especially for the next generation.
After listening to the strong opposition to the construction of the New Centennial
Water Source Kaliwa Dam Project, we too express our opposition to the said project and
strongly recommend to look for alternative sources to the Kaliwa Dam for the following
reasons:
2. Kaliwa dam to be constructed over the Infanta Fault will be a “sword hanging
over the head” of 100,000 people living downstream the Kaliwa River. Etched
in their memory is the 2004 flash flood that left 1,000 killed and over million
worth of properties destroyed.
3. Climate change and its ill-effects are the ‘new normal’ that could no longer be
ignored yet we do not know of any study made on climate and the Kaliwa dam.
The ambivalent nature of climate change can cause random and sudden
flooding. Japan with its highly advanced technology was devasted by the
earthquake in 2011. The catastrophic collapse of the dam in Laos last July 25,
2018 has a message to all of us.
4. Global warming was 0.8 degree centigrade when Yolanda struck us with 315
kph winds. This year we have reached 1 degree centigrade. How much rainfall
can this dam hold when another Yolanda comes in Quezon? About the
landslides?
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NO TO KALIWA DAM…
A Pastoral Letter
5. NEDA has kept the data on Kaliwa dam secret with the word “confidential”
despite the much publicized Freedom of Information E.O. No. 2, series of 2016.
6. This project which is connected with the Laiban dam has been in the pipeline
for 30 years, yet until now it does not even have the necessary Environment
Compliance Certificate (ECC) as mandated by R.A. 7586.
In 2000 the World Commission on Dams (WCM) mandated by the World Bank and
the World Conservation Union (IUCN) reported that while "dams have made an
important and significant contribution to human development, and benefits derived from
them have been considerable... in too many cases an unacceptable and often unnecessary
price has been paid to secure those benefits, especially in social and environmental terms,
by people displaced, by communities downstream, by taxpayers and by the natural
environment."
Angat and IPO dams supply Metro Manila with 4,000 MLD of water but a big
percentage of this is lost due to leaks. With the P18 Billion budget for constructing Kaliwa
Dam, there can be alternative sources of water, many of which are being advocated now:
2. Harvest rain water which flood us perennially and implement the pertinent
provision of the National Building Code of the Philippines (RA 1096).
3. Fast track the recovery of the NRW (non-revenue water) through fixing leaks;
4. Rehabilitate the Pasig-Laguna River Basin which would cost only P13 Billion
(estimated by Dr. Esteban Godilano, an environmental scientist).
5. Adopt the Singapore New Water technology which treats wastewater to become
potable.
6. And most importantly, protect and expand our dwindling forests that serves as
our largest watershed and these would refill our underground aquifers which
are now over extracted.
All of us – government and the people - have to work together to resolve our water
issues. Hence as pastors of the faithful we
1. Support a transparent dialogue with MWSS and NEDA and the stakeholders of
the Kaliwa dam making available all the pertinent documents;
2. Support the initiative in Congress and Senate to make an inquiry into the
Kaliwa Dam; and
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NO TO KALIWA DAM…
A Pastoral Letter
3. Encourage all to “rethink how to use water” in terms of the demand-side and
consumption and protect our environment.
World Commission on Dams sees that “the future for water and energy resources
development lies with participatory decision-making, using a rights-and-risks approach
that will raise the importance of the social and environmental dimensions of dams to a
level once reserved for the economic dimension.”
Pope Francis warns that: “Caring for the ecosystems demands farsightedness, since
no one looking for quick and easy profit is truly interested in their preservation.” (Laudato
Si #36)
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NO TO KALIWA DAM…
A Pastoral Letter