Polluting Boracay establishments given 2 months to ‘shape up’

Shape up or face closure.

Environment Secretary Roy A. Cimatu issued this warning to commercial establishments releasing untreated wastewater and sewage into the waters of the world-famous Boracay Island.

Cimatu said that erring establishments are given two months to either connect to the sewage treatment plant of Boracay Island Water Company (BIWC) or install their own wastewater treatment facilities.

“The DENR is giving them two months to comply with the law. Otherwise, we will close them,” Cimatu said.

President Rodrigo Duterte recently ordered the environment chief to find ways to end problems besetting Boracay which he described as a “cesspool.”

He gave Cimatu six months to clean up one of the country’s top tourist destination or else the entire island will be shut down.

According to Cimatu, around 50 to 60 percent of all establishments in Boracay are compliant to Republic Act No. 9275 or the Philippine Clean Water Act of 2004.

“All the rest direct their pipes to the canals which drain to the sea,” he lamented.

Under R.A. 9275, establishments and households are mandated to dispose their septic wastes to a treatment facility.

Cimatu said that a notice of violation will soon be issued to establishments that are illegally connected or are not connected at all to the sewage treatment plant.

“We will give these establishments three to five days to respond. Otherwise, we will cut their water connections,” Cimatu warned.

Aside from the sewage problem, Cimatu said the DENR will also go after resort owners who have constructed buildings within areas classified as forestlands.

“Forestlands are no-build zones. What they have done is against the law,” Cimatu said, referring to Presidential Decree No. 705 or the Revised Forestry Code of the Philippines.

Cimatu said he had already issued a directive that no new environmental compliance certificates or ECC will be issued in Boracay to prevent the construction of new buildings there.

“For me, the law is the law. This is a different battle but this is our chance to rehabilitate Boracay,” he said. “Once all these problems are fixed, it will be a better Boracay,” he added. (DENR-PR)

Popular

Drug-free region: ASEAN vows zero tolerance vs. illicit drugs

By Ruth Abbey Gita-Carlos | Philippine News Agency The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) pledged to adopt a zero-tolerance approach to the illicit narcotics...

ASEAN rewrites charter for first time in nearly 20 years; adopts climate, AI accords

By Darryl John Esguerra | Philippine News Agency Leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) on Friday adopted the Cebu Protocol to Amend...

PBBM: ASEAN leaders agree on maritime cooperation, establishing maritime center in PH

By Brian Campued Leaders from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) reaffirmed its shared commitment to maintain and promote peace, security, stability, and prosperity...

PBBM: ASEAN moves to future-proof member-states through ‘LEAD-SAIL-RISE’ framework

By Brian Campued The member-states of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) have agreed to bolster cooperation not only amid the economic impact of...