CAN WE GENERATE POWER WHILE CONTROLLING FLOODS?
CAN WE GENERATE POWER WHILE CONTROLLING FLOODS?
Yes, we can—and the truth is, we already do. The Philippines has long had the capability to generate power while controlling floods, and in some cases, we even get irrigation as a bonus. As I like to say, anywhere we have water, we can also grow fish, so why not add aquaculture to the benefits as well? That makes it a four-in-one solution: power generation, flood control, irrigation, and aquaculture. So why aren’t we building more of these?
Let’s start with our oldest model: Caliraya-Kalayaan, one of Southeast Asia’s first pumped-storage hydropower systems. Built decades ago, it is still producing nearly 797 megawatts of clean power—enough for almost three million households. But its benefits go beyond electricity. Caliraya moderates water flow during typhoons, complements irrigation systems downstream, and has even become a tourism zone. It is everything we want infrastructure to be: efficient, multi-purpose, and future-proof.
Fast forward to today, and we now have a second working model: Lake Mainit Hydroelectric Power Plant in Jabonga, Agusan del Norte. At 24.9 MW, it is smaller, but its impact is huge. Jabonga used to suffer devastating floods from Lake Mainit overflow. Today, controlled water releases help protect the town—while generating clean energy for the Mindanao grid. This is real-world climate resilience, not theoretical talk.
But here is the question that keeps bothering me: Why did it take us several decades to move from Caliraya to Jabonga? And more importantly: how soon can we bring this model to Lake Lanao, Pantabangan, Magat, Naujan Lake, or any of our country’s 200+ lakes?
To build these four-in-one systems, we need inter-agency cooperation. The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) could take the lead on flood control. The National Irrigation Administration (NIA) should handle irrigation. The National Electrification Administration (NEA) and the Department of Energy (DOE) can take care of power. The Department of Agriculture (DA) can integrate aquaculture. But who will convene them? How do we break the silos?
Perhaps we need a National Water-Energy Council to push these projects faster. President Marcos Jr. has already emphasized the need for more dams and integrated water management. There is even a proposal to merge DOE and NIA for better coordination. But coordination only matters if it speeds things up—not slows things down with bureaucracy.
And while we build these mega-systems, let us not forget the opportunities at the local level. LGUs can develop retention ponds with micro-hydro turbines. Barangays can set up aquaponics linked to flood buffers. Upland areas could use small-scale hydropower to electrify remote villages while reducing downstream floods.
The truth is simple: water is power, and water is also livelihood. Every time we capture it, we reduce disaster. Every time we release it through turbines, we generate electricity. Every time we store it, we irrigate farms. And every time we keep it clean, we can raise fish.
So yes, the answer is clear.
We can generate power while controlling floods—and while irrigating farms and growing fish.
We have done it before; we are doing it now; and we can do it everywhere.
The only real question is:
When will we start treating water as the multi-purpose national asset it truly is?
RAMON IKE V. SENERES
www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/07-18-2026
