WHAT ARE RIVER BASINS?
WHAT ARE RIVER BASINS?
Have we forgotten about our river basins? To say the least: our priorities have shifted. But as the rains lash our towns and rivers swell, it’s high time to revisit the importance of river basins.
A river basin is not just a piece of geography — it’s the land drained by a river and its many tributaries. Think of it as a giant bowl: all the rain, runoff, everything coming down the hills, collecting into that basin, eventually flowing into a main river and out to the sea. These basins are lifelines: they feed our water supply, support agriculture, nurture ecosystems, and help regulate floods.
Yet, sadly, we’ve neglected them. In many places, river basin areas have been converted into housing. Some have become bustling subdivisions or developments. The moment we built on these natural catchments, we contorted nature’s own drainage system — and we must pay the price when floods come.
That raises a critical question: what do we do with people already living in these high-risk zones? Do we uproot them? Evict thousands? That’s not just impractical, it’s deeply unjust. Professor Segundo “Doy” Romero, a political scientist, proposes a more humane solution: build houses on stilts. Practical, yes — but what about those who can’t afford such options? Are we asking them to leave?
For me, though, the more fundamental question is: how do we prevent the flooding in the first place? It’s not enough to react. We need to tame the water, guide it, not fight it blindly.
One concrete step: Local Government Units (LGUs) must seriously adopt Geographic Information Systems (GIS) in their land-use planning. With GIS, they can map out exactly where river basins lie, trace how water flows, and identify vulnerable zones. This is not theoretical — flood-risk research in the Philippines has already used GIS to map multiple basins like Cagayan, Agno, and Mindanao.
But will we actually get better at controlling floods? My gut says yes — but only if we manage them like wild horses: not by trying to lock them away, but by training them, channeling them, guiding them so they don’t run amok.
There are encouraging signs. The ADB, working with the DPWH, is rolling out flood risk management master plans for several river basins, including Mindoro’s Mag-Asawang Tubig, the Agno River, and others. Nature-based solutions are part of the mix: restoring old river channels, planting vegetation along riverbanks, even reforesting parts of watersheds.
We also need deeper, context-specific studies — econometric analyses and flood modeling that tell us not only how much water flows, but why, when, and where. Can we revive the natural absorptive power of floodplains? Are there cost-effective ways to retrofit existing communities — like stilted homes — especially for the most vulnerable?
At the root of this is governance. River basins don’t respect political borders, but our planning often does. LGUs shape their Comprehensive Land-Use Plans (CLUPs) based on barangay or municipal boundaries, not hydrological ones. When that happens, drainage, conservation, disaster risk — everything — becomes fragmented. We need basin-level governance, where upstream and downstream are not adversaries, but partners.
Let’s also remember that our river basins are not just physical systems — they are socio-ecological systems. They store water, yes, but they also sustain communities, wildlife, traditions. The Cagayan River Basin, for example, is home to species like the ludong fish and even rare forest-dwelling birds.
So, what must we do now?
Strengthen GIS-based land-use planning in every LGU.
Promote nature-based flood resilience: reforest headwaters, restore floodplains, incentivize conservation over development.
Explore adaptive housing solutions, like houses on stilts, especially for people in flood-prone zones.
Push for basin-wide governance frameworks — not just local plans, but integrated water-and-land management.
Invest in research — flood risk mapping, econometric studies, early-warning modeling.
Have we forgotten about river basins? I believe we have — but the floods are reminding us, quite literally, where we went wrong. The challenge now is not just to protect lives, but to restore a balance between our communities and nature’s water highways. If we succeed, we might finally tame the wild horses of flooding.
RAMON IKE V. SENERES
www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/06-25-2026
