Sunday, July 12, 2026

HOW ABOUT TURNING HUMAN WASTE INTO RENEWABLE ENERGY?

 HOW ABOUT TURNING HUMAN WASTE INTO RENEWABLE ENERGY?

It may not be an appetizing idea, but who cares if it saves money and makes money? Who cares if it will lower our energy costs and thus reduce our dependence on imported fossil fuels? Who cares if it’s “dirty”—can black coal be any dirtier? The truth is, using human waste can generate clean energy — and that is what really matters.

Believe it or not, this isn’t a science-fiction fantasy. The technology is already working in many parts of the world. So why haven’t we embraced it here? More to the point: why don’t we do it as soon as possible?


Why It Makes Sense

The logic is simple: human waste is free, abundant, and renewable. Through processes like anaerobic digestion, microorganisms break down sewage sludge in the absence of oxygen, producing methane-rich biogas that can be used to generate electricity, heat, or even fuel. The leftover “digestate” can be used as fertilizer. 

There are other high-tech methods, too: hydrothermal carbonization can convert wet sewage into a coal-like “hydrochar,while promising lab-scale microbial fuel cells use bacteria to generate electricity directly from organic waste.

These waste-to-energy systems do more than just produce power. They also reduce greenhouse-gas emissions by capturing methane that would otherwise leak into the atmosphere. And for wastewater treatment plants, the energy recovered can offset a significant portion of their energy needs. One study estimates that anaerobic digestion could offset 50–60% of a plant’s electricity consumption. 


The Big Picture: It's Already Being Done

Globally, the potential is massive. If all sewage in the world were collected and treated through anaerobic digestion, we could generate 210–300 TWh of energy annually — enough to meet the electricity needs of tens of millions of people. The World Biogas Association estimates that by 2050, expanded sewage digestion could generate 385 TWh/year and reduce CO₂ emissions by 95 million tons. 

In Europe, it’s not just theory: Sweden and Poland have wastewater treatment plants that use biogas in real operations. In Barcelona, buses are already running on biomethane derived from human waste — the pilot project emits around 80% less CO₂ than natural gas. 


What About the Philippines?

Here at home, the picture is starting to take shape. The Department of Energy lists several biogas projects; for instance, FDR Integrated Resource Recovery in Naga City, Cebu, runs a 0.624 MW plant using municipal waste. A German company, Atmosfair, has also teamed up with Filipino firms to build biogas facilities that convert organic waste into energy. 

And while most of the local projects use animal or food waste, not human waste, the groundwork is promising. We already have sewage treatment infrastructure: take the Marikina North Sewage Treatment Plant in Metro Manila, which treats 100 million liters of used water daily. Why not tap that sludge for biogas?


But Why the Delay?

If this is such a “free” resource, why haven’t we done more? There are real challenges. Building and maintaining digesters or hydrothermal systems requires upfront investment. Even once made, you need steady waste input and skilled operators. 

Then there’s public perception. Many people recoil at the idea of “burning sewage,” even though coal plants are far dirtier. And from a policy standpoint, governments must create incentives, set safety standards, and ensure digestate is safe for reuse. The World Biogas Association highlights the need for clear regulations and quality benchmarks. 


So, What Should We Do?

  1. Lead the Charge
    The DOE should take the lead — but they shouldn’t be alone. Bring in the DOST (Department of Science and Technology) for research, pilot funding, and technical validation.

  2. Start Small but Smart
    Launch pilot biogas digesters at existing sewage treatment plants like Marikina, or new community systems in underserved areas. Prove the model, then scale up.

  3. Engage Communities
    Educate the public about how “dirty” waste can become clean, renewable energy — and how it could lower electricity costs.

  4. Integrate with Water Projects
    If biogas lowers power costs significantly, could this make desalination more affordable? Imagine turning saltwater to fresh water powered by waste-derived energy.

  5. Set Clear Policy
    Create standards for digester safety, emissions, and the use of residuals. Provide subsidies or tax breaks for waste-to-energy projects to attract private investment.


Final Word: What’s Stopping Us?

Look, this isn’t a radical new concept — it's proven, scalable, and waiting for us to catch up. The question isn’t if we should do this. The only real question is: why aren’t we doing it yet — and why don’t we start now?

If we get serious about turning our own waste into power, we could not only save money and cut imports, but also make a real dent in our carbon footprint. And in the process, bring tangible benefits to ordinary people, especially those who most feel the pinch of high energy costs.

So, to the policymakers, the scientists, and the citizens: how about we stop wrinkling our noses — and start turning what we flush into fuel?

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/07-13-2026

Saturday, July 11, 2026

LET’S BUILD MORE RETENTION PONDS

LET’S BUILD MORE RETENTION PONDS

One of the simplest, cheapest, and most practical solutions to flooding is something we often overlook: retention ponds. These man-made basins hold water permanently and manage stormwater before it wreaks havoc in our communities. And unlike mega-infrastructure projects that take years and billions of pesos, retention ponds are so easy to build that even our barangays can do them.

In other words: Why aren’t we building more of them?

A retention pond slows down stormwater, traps sediments, improves water quality, and prevents erosion downstream. It functions like a community-level buffer against the increasing intensity of rainfall we experience due to climate change. Unlike detention ponds—which dry out between storms—retention ponds always contain water. They look like real ponds, with vegetation around them, attracting fish, birds, and other wildlife.

But what makes retention ponds truly compelling is how multi-purpose they can be.

With proper filtration, they can become a source of potable water. Communities can raise milkfish or catfish, grow kangkong, lettuce, spinach, tomatoes, and even raise ducks. Schools can integrate retention ponds into their campus grounds to teach aquaponics, climate adaptation, and urban ecology. It’s flood control, food production, livelihood, and environmental protection—all in one facility.

If LGUs are looking for a low-cost climate resilience program, this is it.

To their credit, Quezon City has started building retention ponds. But the most aggressive LGU so far seems to be Cebu City, which has gone all in on this strategy.

Cebu City’s Water Catchment Ordinance (City Ordinance 2103) requires subdivisions to build retention ponds proportional to their land area. Inspectors have already checked the retention pond in Monterrazas de Cebu after severe flooding brought by Typhoon Tino. They also inspected the lagoon in Maria Luisa Subdivision, which turned out to be undersized. As a result, the city recommended the construction of two more retention ponds.

In Nasipit, Barangay Talamban, the LGU is building a retention pond to protect low-lying areas like Banilad from repeated flooding. This is what proactive governance looks like.

But the question is: If Cebu City can do it, why not everyone else?

We are an archipelago battered by typhoons year after year, yet our flood mitigation strategies remain heavily dependent on canals, dikes, and pumping stations. Retention ponds represent the kind of barangay-led, community-empowering approach we need to scale nationwide.

Shouldn’t the DILG take the lead in institutionalizing retention ponds across LGUs? And shouldn’t BFAR step in to help with aquaculture components, ensuring water quality and fish safety? With proper monitoring, retention ponds can support controlled aquaponics, provided pollutants are tested and managed.

Of course, not all ponds are safe for eating fish. Stormwater runoff may carry contaminants, so LGUs must test the water regularly. But even if the fish are not for consumption, they control mosquito larvae, support local biodiversity, and keep the ecosystem healthy. Meanwhile, vegetables grown via floating rafts or bog gardening can help absorb excess nutrients and reduce algae blooms.

So here’s a proposal:
Let’s adopt a modular retention pond framework for every LGU—micro-ponds in parks, barangay-scale ponds near schools, and large LGU ponds for inter-barangay flood buffering. It’s doable, it’s affordable, and it’s urgently needed.

Flooding has become our new normal. Retention ponds should become our new response.

Let’s build more retention ponds—before the next storm reminds us why we should have.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/07-12-2026


Friday, July 10, 2026

CARBON CREDITS FOR PLASTIC WASTE RECYCLING

 CARBON CREDITS FOR PLASTIC WASTE RECYCLING

It’s an idea whose time has truly come: carbon credits for plastic waste recycling. At long last, we’re seeing formal mechanisms that reward recovery, not just emissions reductions. And for the Philippines — a major contributor to ocean plastics — this could be a game-changer.


What Are Plastic-Based Carbon Credits?

These “plastic credits” are units representing a specific amount of plastic that has been avoided, collected, or recycled. The new wrinkle: they’re now being tied directly to greenhouse gas (GHG) mitigation. By preventing plastic from leaking into the environment or being incinerated, these credits convert circular action into real climate value.

One of the leading models is from Plastiks, partnered with the carbon verification firm ECOTA and recovery organization Ocean Integrity. Together, they’ve committed to certify 100,000 metric tons of recovered plastic for carbon credit issuance by December 2025.
Their system is rigorous: every kilogram recovered is tracked via blockchain, timestamped, geolocated, and verified. This isn’t greenwashing — it’s traceable, auditable, real recovery.

Meanwhile, AIROI, another pioneer in this space, is turning plastic pollution into GHG offsets through its “Green Carbon Wallet.” Their blockchain-enabled platform lets companies, communities, even local governments monetize verified plastic collection and recycling. 

Then there's Verra, a heavyweight in the sustainability-certification arena. Through its Plastic Waste Reduction Program, Verra issues two types of plastic credits: Waste Collection Credits (WCCs) and Waste Recycling Credits (WRCs). These credits strictly quantify plastic collected or recycled above baseline rates, ensuring impact is genuine, additional, and independently verified. 


Why This Matters — Especially for Us

  1. New Climate Finance for the Philippines
    Carbon credits tied to plastic recovery could channel real money to our country — not just for tree planting, but for cleaning up plastic pollution. This is climate finance with a circular economy twist.

  2. Protecting Our Oceans and Wildlife
    More plastic collected means less microplastic leaking into seas. It’s a fight for marine life, for ecosystems, for every turtle and fish that mistake plastic for food.

  3. Health & Pollution
    Reducing plastic waste also reduces methane and CO₂ emissions from decomposition or incineration. That’s a direct win for climate and public health.

  4. Economic Opportunity
    Imagine local recycling cooperatives earning verified carbon credits for collecting and processing plastic. It’s a job-creation opportunity rooted in environmental stewardship.


But There’s Risk — We Must Be Careful

This market is still nascent, and skeptics are not wrong to raise concerns:

  • There’s a danger of greenwashing, where companies simply buy credits instead of reducing plastic use.

  • Not all plastic credit frameworks are created equal — methodology, verification, and transparency vary. 

  • Without strong regulation, there’s a risk that plastic credit schemes become a way to “offset” rather than prevent pollution.


What the Philippine Government Should Do Now

  1. Get in Early
    The rules for plastic-based carbon credits are formalizing fast. Our government should engage proactively with platforms like Plastiks–ECOTA, AIROI, and Verra to design pilot projects here.

  2. Embed in National Waste Policy
    Include plastic credit mechanisms in our circular economy and ESG frameworks. Use them not just for finance, but for real, traceable environmental action.

  3. Support Local Collectors
    Fund or support certified recovery organizations — especially community cooperatives that pick up plastic on the ground — so they can issue credits and earn more.

  4. Use Blockchain and Verification
    Insist on transparency: blockchain tracking (like Plastiks) ensures the plastic you pay for is the plastic that was actually collected.


My Final Thought

For the Philippines, plastic-based carbon credits are more than just an income stream. They are a moral and ecological lifeline. We have a chance to benefit financially and rewrite our plastic legacy. But only if we act smart. Only if we insist on real, measured, verifiable recovery, not just hot air.

Let’s not just chase dollars — let’s protect our seas, our future, and our climate. Can we rise to that challenge?

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/07-11-2026


Thursday, July 09, 2026

USING SOFTWARE FOR MONITORING GOVERNMENT PROJECTS

USING SOFTWARE FOR MONITORING GOVERNMENT PROJECTS

The Philippine government already uses several project monitoring platforms—Project DIME, Bisto Proyekto, BuildTrust, and a mix of international project management software. And yet, despite these tools, massive corruption in flood control projects still occurred. This raises an uncomfortable question: If the systems were there, why did they fail?

Was the software installed but never used? Were users inadequately trained? Or worse, did corrupt insiders feed wrong or misleading data into the system—turning what should have been a safeguard into a mere façade?

Software is only as honest as the people who use it. That is the truth many don’t want to confront.


The Limitations of “Canned” Software

We often assume that any project management (PM) software—Asana, Monday.com, ClickUp, Microsoft Project, Jira—can magically eliminate irregularities. But these tools, while excellent for tracking tasks and timelines, are not built to detect anomalies, illegal fund releases, or ghost accomplishments.

They will not flag that a contractor was paid without completing a milestone, or that a project site does not exist in reality. Only a system designed for fraud detection, equipped with AI, geotagging, satellite validation, and blockchain auditing, can do that.

This is why I fully agree with President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.’s call for the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in monitoring government infrastructure projects. But before AI can work, you need a solid foundation: robust, professional-grade software tailored to public-sector realities—not generic task trackers.


We Actually Have Good Tools—But Are They Being Used Right?

Let’s look at the government platforms that already exist:

🛰️ Project DIME (DBM)

Uses satellites, drones, and geotagging to validate infrastructure projects.
Tracks status, percentage completion, funding, and implementing agencies.

🧭 Bisto Proyekto

A citizen-reporting platform that lets communities verify projects through a map-based interface.

🔍 BuildTrust

Aggregates project data, allows citizens to upload evidence, and monitors contractor performance.

These tools strengthen transparency—in theory. But the failure of flood control monitoring suggests either (a) data was not updated, (b) there was no enforcement, or (c) the systems’ outputs were simply ignored.

That is the real issue: technology without political will becomes nothing more than decoration.


Where AI and Blockchain Must Come In

AI can analyze thousands of project entries and detect red flags:

  • identical progress reports across multiple regions

  • fund releases misaligned with physical accomplishments

  • geotagged photos reused by contractors

  • projects located in areas with no satellite-detected activity

Blockchain, meanwhile, can create an immutable ledger of transactions. Once funds move or milestones are logged, nobody can alter them without leaving a digital fingerprint.

But again, these innovations can only work after the government standardizes its project monitoring system. Right now, agencies use different platforms, different reporting styles, and different integrity standards. This fragmentation is exactly what corrupt actors exploit.


My Suggestion: One National PM Platform, Modular per LGU

Instead of 20 disconnected dashboards, we should have a single national project monitoring backbone that integrates:

  • PM tools (Microsoft Project or ClickUp for internal planning)

  • AI fraud detection

  • Blockchain auditing

  • Satellite/drone verification

  • Citizen-reporting tools like Bisto and BuildTrust

LGUs could have their own access layers, with barangay-level reporting built in.

This is not a technical dream—it is doable. Countries like Estonia, Singapore, and South Korea have already unified government monitoring platforms with AI assistance.


Final Question

We don’t lack software. We lack integration, enforcement, and purpose-built systems that can outsmart corruption instead of merely documenting it.

So before we blame technology, we should ask:

Are we willing to make the system smarter than the people trying to cheat it?

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/07-10-2026


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