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August 25, 2024

As Bulacan River Cleanup Nears Completion, SMC Moves Attention To Pampanga


San Miguel Corporation (SMC) is nearing completion of its river cleanup in Bulacan, having removed over 4.2 million tons of silt and waste.

This effort, spanning 74 kilometers of waterways, is the largest volume extracted in SMC’s Luzon-wide initiative.

The project, part of SMC’s Better Rivers PH advocacy, comes at no cost to the government or taxpayers. It has been running since 2020, and previously covered the Tullahan, Pasig, and San Juan rivers in Metro Manila, among others.

SMC’s Bulacan cleanup has removed waste from major rivers including the Taliptip-Maycapiz-Bambang, Meycauayan, Marilao, Mailad-Sta. Maria, Guiguinto, Balagtas, Pamarawan, Kalero, and Labangan-Angat Rivers.

“Our river cleanup initiative in Bulacan is now in its second year and so far, it is the most extensive of all the river cleanups we have done. The total volume of wastes and silt we have removed here—4,255,398 tons—is about twice the combined volume we extracted from the Pasig and Tullahan rivers,” said SMC Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Ramon S. Ang.

With the Bulacan cleanup nearing its end, SMC is setting its sights on Pampanga River. It is also looking to expand cleanup efforts in Binan, Laguna, and Paranaque City.

Ang stressed the importance of desilting and clearing obstructions in rivers to mitigate flooding, which has worsened due to factors like low-lying geography, deforestation, garbage clogging waterways, rising sea levels, land subsidence, and excessive fishponds.

Recently, Metro Manila and nearby provinces experienced widespread flooding due to unprecedented heavy rainfall brought on by typhoon Carina.

While flooding was experienced in many areas, Ang said the situation could have been a lot worse, had it not been for their completed river cleanup efforts, which effectively increased the carrying capacity of rivers and ensured their continuous flow.

“Flooding is a complex problem with multiple causes and needing various solutions. We cannot conveniently blame it on one thing, when in fact, the many causes of the problem have already been existing and building up over several generations,” said Ang.

7 comments:

  1. Please lang mga pogi huwag na magtapon ng basura sa ilog or dagat.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Kudos SMC, we could have more flooded areas!

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  3. While I am thankful to SMC for doing this as a private entity, I'm concerned about this. Since the last Carina flooding damage is still extensive in Tullahan and San Juan River areas, does it mean the last attempt is insufficient or incomplete that it needs re-work? Perhaps the people are dumping waste faster than the dredging work being done on?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yup yup people are dumping more than what’s being collected by SMC

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  4. Dredging is a waste of money. The extracted silt and waste will soon be replaced by silt from upstream current during the succeeding rainy days and typhoons. The proposed airport will just sink lower and lower through the years just like what happened in Japan.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Smc has experts from netherland for the airport.

      Delete
    2. Sad sad thinker

      Delete

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