Sunday, July 05, 2026

HOW SERIOUS IS THE PROBLEM OF SALINIZATION IN THE PHILIPPINES?

HOW SERIOUS IS THE PROBLEM OF SALINIZATION IN THE PHILIPPINES?

Salt is not just for food anymore — in many parts of the Philippines, salt is silently invading our farms, our wells, and our future. Salinization is no longer a minor nuisance, but a real threat to food security, water supply, and livelihoods.


Salt on the Land: More Than Just a Nuisance

Salinization — the buildup of salt in soil and water — affects coastal and low-lying areas across the country. In rice fields alone, it can slash yields by 30–50 percent. In Navotas and Balayan (Batangas), farmers are already reporting dramatic drops in production because of saline-sodic soils. According to PhilRice, between 500,000 and 600,000 hectares of farmland are at risk of salinity, with up to 200,000 hectares being seriously salt-affected.

What’s driving this? Rising sea levels from climate change, poor groundwater and irrigation management, and storm surges are pushing saltwater into soils and aquifers. These forces don’t act in isolation — they reinforce each other.


Beyond Rice: Saltwater’s Hidden Dangers

Rice is the poster crop, but the damage doesn’t stop there:

  • Inland fisheries suffer, too. Too much salinity kills freshwater species outright; too much—but not enough—can convert fresh ecosystems into brackish ones, disrupting native fish populations.

  • Drinking water becomes unsafe. When salt infiltrates wells and freshwater sources, water becomes unpalatable or even dangerous. The cost of treating it (desalination) is steep.

  • Desalination costs add up. Once an area is heavily salinized, the government may be forced to pay for desalination systems — a significant burden for local communities.


How We’re Coping: Science and Policy

There’s some hope. In parts of Camarines Sur, provincial agencies, PhilRice, and DAR are helping local farmers use salt-tolerant rice varieties. One farmer in Casiguran (Boton village) switched to a stress-tolerant rice (NSIC Rc-182) after saltwater intrusion, and saw yield recovery — he went from near crop failure to a more stable harvest. 

PhilRice continues breeding rice that can stand up to salt stress: in Albay, 36 new lines outperformed known varieties under saline conditions. 


Desalination Is On the Table, But It’s Complicated

The DENR is already working on this. By the end of 2025, it plans to deploy 28 water filtration systems in small island barangays — 10 of them explicitly for saline water. It’s also eyeing modular desalination plants, using Israeli technology, to convert seawater into drinking water in up to 65 coastal villages. The projects are expensive — estimates run between ₱5 million to ₱8 million per plant, but DENR says the modular systems can support a few hundred households. 


What Must Local and National Governments Do?

Here’s where I think we need to be bold and smart:

  1. Local salinity mapping: LGUs must partner with scientists and farmers to map which barangays are being affected right now.

  2. Water governance integration: We need to tie together irrigation policy, groundwater management, and coastal buffer systems (like mangroves) to prevent salt intrusion.

  3. Scaling resilient farming: Promote salt-tolerant rice, but also teach adaptive soil practices — crop rotation, organic amendments, better drainage.

  4. Community-managed desalination: Let coastal barangays run and maintain their own small-scale desalination systems — but make sure they are affordable and sustainable.

  5. National coordination: The Department of Agriculture, DENR, and LGUs must work under a unified plan — salinization is not just a farming issue, it’s a water-security and climate issue.


My Bottom Line

Salinization in the Philippines is not just a farmer’s problem — it’s a national problem. It threatens our food and water security, especially in coastal and vulnerable areas. The good news? We have technologies, science, and models to fight back. But we need the will — from our leaders, our communities, and ourselves — to treat salinization not as a distant climate footnote, but as a clear and present danger.

If we don’t act now, salt could slowly, relentlessly eat away at our ability to feed ourselves and drink water. And that’s a price this nation cannot afford to pay.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/07-06-2026


Saturday, July 04, 2026

THE TWIN PROBLEMS OF SILTED RIVERS AND RISING SEA LEVELS

THE TWIN PROBLEMS OF SILTED RIVERS AND RISING SEA LEVELS

While the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) is busy building dikes, floodways, and other infrastructure to control flooding, one has to wonder: are we ignoring a more fundamental problem? The twin crises of silted rivers and rising sea levels are quietly conspiring to make flooding, saltwater intrusion, and water insecurity worse — and I don’t hear enough national alarm bells going off.

How Silt Closes Our Rivers

Rivers across the Philippines are becoming shallower due to silt build-up. DPWH itself has admitted that many major rivers are badly silted, but that desilting hasn’t been funded properly — year after year.
Take the Pampanga River: Governor Lilia Pineda recently urged desilting along a 34-kilometer stretch, citing reduced capacity and massive flood damage amounting to over ₱432 million in infrastructure losses.
And in Nueva Ecija, the Digmala River, a part of the Upper Pampanga River system, is being desilted — 4.4 kilometers are being cleared to restore its depth and reduce overflow. 

Why does this matter? Because when rivers are choked by silt, their capacity to channel rainwater drops dramatically. During heavy downpours, the water has nowhere to go, and the result is more frequent and more devastating flooding. Added sediment also smothers aquatic habitats, reducing biodiversity and harming rivers’ self-cleaning capacity.

When the Sea Creeps In

At the same time, our coastal areas are under siege from rising sea levels. In Manila, sea level is reportedly increasing at a rate of 2.6 cm per year, according to a recent study. Part of the culprit? Land subsidence—our cities are sinking, in some cases, because we extract too much groundwater.
Rising seas aren’t just a distant worry — they are already pushing saltwater into rivers, estuaries, and aquifers, threatening both agriculture and drinking water supply. For example, nearly 28 percent of coastal municipalities in Luzon already report saltwater intrusion.
In a place like Dagupan, coastal and riverine flooding risks are compounded by the combined forces of sea-level rise, land subsidence, and saltwater intrusion — putting farms and homes at risk.

A Dangerous Interaction

Here’s the scary part: silted rivers and rising sea levels don’t act in isolation — they amplify each other. Saltwater pushed in by rising seas travels further upstream in silted, slow-moving rivers. That means inland flooding, salinized fields, and infrastructure strain. Older bridges, irrigation systems, and even water supply networks are not built for this double whammy.

What Can Be Done — And What’s Already Being Tried

1. Desilting & Sediment Management

  • Dredging: Targeted dredging of silted river channels to restore depth and flow. For instance, Ilocos Norte has begun clearing its Bislak River under a new DENR policy.

  • Watershed reforestation: Planting trees upstream to slow erosion and reduce incoming sediment.

  • Sediment traps, dams, and natural flow restoration: To catch silt before it blocks the river downstream.

2. Adapting to Rising Seas

  • Ecosystem restoration: Mangroves and wetlands can buffer waves and surges, while also filtering water.

  • Climate-smart urban planning: Raise key infrastructure, coordinate zoning to allow retreat zones in vulnerable areas, and update flood maps.

  • Better water use management: Limit groundwater extraction to reduce subsidence, and improve aquifer recharge.

  • Global cooperation: Push for stronger climate action that slows sea-level rise.

But Why Isn’t It Happening Fast Enough?

  • Broken water management: Our system is fragmented. DPWH, DENR, LGUs — too many agencies, too little coordination.

  • Budget gaps: DPWH has repeatedly asked for funds to desilt rivers, but often comes up empty.

  • Low visibility: Infrastructure projects get attention, but "invisible" work like riverbed restoration doesn’t have the same political appeal.

  • Short-term thinking: We often react to floods after they happen, not plan for long-term resilience.

My Two Cents

If we are serious about long-term resilience, we need to stop treating river desilting and sea-level rise as separate issues. They are deeply interconnected. Funds and political will should catch up with science.

  • Let’s form a National Water Resilience Task Force that unites DPWH, DENR, LGUs, scientists, and community stakeholders to plan desilting and adaptation.

  • Incentivize community-led monitoring: involve fisherfolk, farmers, and barangays in tracking silt levels and reporting saltwater intrusion.

  • Tie climate loans (like from ADB or other multilateral lenders) to projects that tackle both sediment and sea-level threats.

  • Finally, let’s build a public narrative: restoring our rivers is not just about preventing floods — it’s about protecting our land, our water, and our future.

The fires of climate change and environmental neglect are burning. We cannot afford to feed them with inaction. It’s time to act before our rivers are choked, and the sea takes back what once was ours.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/07-05-2026


Friday, July 03, 2026

LET’S STOP FEEDING THE FIRES OF CORRUPTION

 LET’S STOP FEEDING THE FIRES OF CORRUPTION

Corruption is like a fire—it continues to burn only because we keep feeding it with bribes, fear, silence, and complicity. If we truly wanted to put it out, we’d have to douse it with real, hard-hitting reforms—and a change of heart.

Let’s start by facing a harsh reality: the Philippines isn’t doing so well on the global corruption scale. According to Transparency International’s 2024 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI), we scored just 33 out of 100, landing us at 114th out of 180 countries. That’s barely above our longtime average, and still well below the global mean of 43. 

These numbers aren’t just statistics—they reflect a deeper breakdown in trust. Public officials remain perceived as deeply corrupt, bribery is worryingly normalized, and the public funds entrusted to leaders are too often rerouted for personal gain.

So how do we finally stop fueling this fire?

Real Reforms, Real Tools

Automate where you can.
One of the sharpest calls I’ve heard lately: reduce discretion in public offices. The more power a bureaucrat has to decide on a whim, the stronger the temptation for corruption. Automation—digital systems for approvals, payments, and clear-cut workflows—can dramatically cut that space.

Install accountability machinery.
Imagine CCTV not just in one or two corruptible offices, but systematically in government halls where permits, budgets, and disbursements pass. When people know they are watched, they think twice.
We also need serious lifestyle checks for public officials—not as a symbolic ritual, but as a required, regular audit. Along with that: robust filing and public disclosure of Statements of Assets, Liabilities, and Net Worth (SALN); random checks by AMLC (Anti–Money Laundering Council); and empowered Internal Affairs Bureaus in police forces.

Enable citizen power.
Whistleblowers must be protected—and rewarded. Ordinary citizens should be given the information, the platforms, and the courage to report abuse. We have the Civil Service Commission (CSC) and the Ombudsman, and they deserve to be backed not only by law but by public pressure. Social media is no longer a sideshow; it’s where corruption stories break, where communities rally, and where accountability can begin.

A Moral, National Reckoning

Stopping corruption isn’t just a technical exercise. It’s also a call to collective conscience. Silence, apathy, and fear are the fuel that corruption feeds on. If we break that by refusing to accept “palakasan” as normal, by demanding transparency, by living and voting with integrity, we change the culture that allows the fire to rage.

We must turn the conversation from finger-pointing to purposeful transformation:

  • Teach honesty at home, in schools, and in communities.

  • Elect leaders who serve, not steal—and hold them accountable.

  • Inspire civic courage over complacency.

Let’s Be the New Fire

It’s time to feed a different kind of flame:

  • A fire of truth, not lies.

  • A fire of service, not self-interest.

  • A fire of community, not corruption.

This is not just reform. It’s a renewal. A spiritual and civic awakening that calls on each of us to reject the status quo—and to build a public life rooted in justice, not greed.

So yes, we are not powerless. We are stewards of our nation’s soul. Let us rise—not in blind rage, but with resolve; not to blame, but to change.

Let’s stop feeding the fires of corruption … and start kindling the fires of justice.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/07-04-2026


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