Tuesday, July 07, 2026

NEW SEAPLANE DESIGN FOR INTER-ISLAND FLIGHTS

 NEW SEAPLANE DESIGN FOR INTER-ISLAND FLIGHTS

Imagine a sleek vessel that glides just above the sea surface, powered purely by batteries—part plane, part boat, zero emissions. That’s not science fiction anymore: it’s Regent Craft’s Seaglider, a truly groundbreaking design that could reimagine how we travel between islands.


What Exactly Is the Seaglider?

Regent calls it a 100% electric “wing-in-ground-effect” (WIG) vehicle. It doesn’t need runways—it operates over water in three modes: floating on its hull, riding on hydrofoils, and gliding just above the surface on its wings.  Their flagship model, the Viceroy, carries 12 passengers + 2 crew, reaches a range of about 180 miles (160 nautical miles), and can cruise at 180 mph. 

Sea trials have already begun: in March 2025, the prototype was launched in Narragansett Bay. And it’s not just fast—it’s being developed to very high safety standards, with certification support from Lloyd’s Register and coordination with the U.S. Coast Guard. 


Why This Matters for an Archipelagic Country Like the Philippines

1. Inter-Island Connectivity Reinvented
Our country is made up of over 7,000 islands—but our transport remains heavily dependent on slow ferries or expensive planes. A Seaglider-like craft could offer high-speed, low-emission travel without the infrastructure of airports. Imagine barangays or smaller islands connected via “floating runways” at existing docks.

2. Disaster Response & Medical Evacuation
Because it can land and take off from water, a Seaglider could double as a sea ambulance. In remote or hard-hit coastal areas, we could deploy it for urgent medical transport—with no reliance on airstrips or large aircraft. Regent’s Viceroy is even designed with a cargo/multimission layout: it can carry up to 3,500 lbs of payload. 

3. Climate-Resilient & Low-Carbon

Powered entirely by batteries, the Seaglider produces zero greenhouse-gas emissions. Unlike diesel ferries or small planes, it could help lower our carbon footprint. Plus, because it skims just above water, its wing-in-ground effect reduces drag, making it remarkably efficient

4. Dual-Use Potential
It’s not just for civilians. Regent has secured defense interest. The United States Marine Corps is evaluating Seagliders for logistics, medevac, and even special operations. A similar concept in the Philippines could support coast guard, disaster response, or even remote community access.


Can We Build This Here?

Here’s where my mind goes: yes, we could—but we'd need to be smart and creative.

  • Even though the PADC (Philippine Aerospace Development Corporation) has been officially terminated recently. There’s a gap in national aerospace capacity. Could DOST (Department of Science and Technology) pick up the slack?

  • Imagine a partnership: DOST + PEZA + private sector to prototype a local seaglider, or license Regent's tech.

  • We could begin with local routes: Palawan, Bicol, Eastern Visayas—areas where inter-island transport is critical and traditional airports are limited.

  • Integrate community-based maintenance hubs: high school or barangay technical centers could serve as Seaglider docking and charging stations.


Real Challenges We Should Not Ignore

  • Certification will be hard: WIG vehicles are new, and regulation may be murky. Regent is working with Lloyd’s Register to define a path.

  • Battery technology: range and charge times may limit operations, especially in remote islands with weak infrastructure.

  • Cost: Even if tickets are “half the cost of a plane,” there will still be capital expenses for vessels, docks, charging stations.

  • Weather: Sea conditions, waves, and storms remain a risk. While Seagliders are engineered for “wave tolerance,” we would need rigorous local testing.


My Take

Regent’s Seaglider could be a game-changer for Philippine mobility. For someone like me who works in modular, low-carbon infrastructure and community resilience, this is exactly the kind of innovation we need. It aligns with climate goals, supports remote and coastal communities, and opens real possibilities for barangay-level connectivity.

If we start planning now, we could pilot such a craft between key island provinces—not just as a novelty, but as part of our national transport backbone. Inter-island flights don’t always need runways. What if the future of Philippine aviation is on the water instead?

We should ask: Are we willing to imagine that future? And if yes, who will build it with us?

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/07-08-2026


Monday, July 06, 2026

WHY IS THERE A NEED FOR MORE INLAND FISHERIES?

 WHY IS THERE A NEED FOR MORE INLAND FISHERIES?

When we talk about food security in the Philippines, the conversation almost always drifts toward rice, imports, and maritime fishing. But there is a quieter, more stable, more resilient source of food that we are not maximizing: inland fisheries.

And yes, there is a growing need for more of them—but with a very important caveat. We should stop converting wetlands into fishponds. Wetlands are already among the most threatened ecosystems in the country. They regulate floods, nurture biodiversity, and act as carbon sinks. Turning them into ponds is a short-term gain with long-term ecological losses.

So how do we expand inland fish production responsibly?

The answer lies in above-ground, closed-loop technologies such as the Recirculating Aquaculture System (RAS). Architect Ran Quijano, through his social enterprise, has been helping cooperatives set up these modular RAS facilities—systems that recycle water, minimize waste, and fit even in tight or urban spaces. This is the kind of innovation that doesn’t eat up wetlands or agricultural land.

Another promising alternative is the use of recycled shipping containers—a brilliant example of the circular economy at work. Companies like Vantastic are already repurposing containers into aquaculture-ready modules. Stackable, movable, climate-resistant: these are the fish farms of the future.

Why stop there? We could go vertical. Imagine aquaculture inside high-rise buildings, idle warehouses, abandoned factories, basements, even parking structures. If we can plant lettuce in skyscrapers, we can certainly grow tilapia there.

Why inland fisheries matter now more than ever

1. Food Security and Nutrition

Freshwater fish—milkfish, carp, catfish—are a critical protein source. They provide omega-3s, iron, zinc, and other micronutrients essential for child development. Urban poor communities, who often struggle to afford marine fish, rely heavily on these inland species.

2. Livelihoods and Local Economies

Millions globally depend on inland fisheries for income. In the Philippines, women dominate fish drying, processing, and small-scale trading. This sector’s growth supports inclusive, grassroots economic resilience.

3. Climate-Resilient Protein

Unlike coastal fishing, which is threatened by typhoons, rising seas, and extreme waves, inland aquaculture can be shielded from the elements. A well-designed RAS tank doesn’t care if Signal No. 3 hits your province.

4. Cleaner and Safer

Marine fish are increasingly contaminated with microplastics. In mining areas, river and coastal species have shown mercury contamination—a public health time bomb. Controlled inland systems reduce this risk.

5. Cheaper and Greener

Catching or importing fish from far-off seas burns fuel. Producing fish in your own city or barangay slashes transport costs—and therefore emissions.

An ecosystem-friendly expansion

Saying “more inland fisheries” doesn’t mean “more fishponds.” It means smarter, cleaner systems that exist above the ground, not instead of ecosystems. It means aligning with biodiversity protection rather than competing with it.

Inland waters—lakes, rivers, marshes—are home to unique species now under threat from pollution and damming. Boosting sustainable inland fisheries is a way to invest in their protection, not their destruction.

A question for policymakers

If we can promote rooftop solar, why can’t we promote rooftop aquaculture?
If we can subsidize fertilizer, why not subsidize RAS modules for cooperatives?
If we can build malls, why not build vertical fish farms?

The technology exists. Social enterprises exist. The demand for clean, affordable fish definitely exists.

The missing link is political imagination.

A future within reach

Inland fisheries are not merely about raising fish. They are about reviving ecological memory, increasing community resilience, and bringing food production closer to where people actually live.

If we plan it right—and avoid repeating the mistakes of wetland conversion—this could become one of the most sustainable, scalable pillars of our food system.

Wouldn’t it be remarkable if every barangay could grow its own fish, shielded from storms, free from contamination, and supported by Filipino-designed technology?

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

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


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


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