21/05/2026
Pati ba naman tubig nanganganib na maubos?
The Department of Environment and Natural Resources has warned that the Philippines is facing a critical “water bankruptcy” situation, where national water consumption is beginning to exceed the country’s natural capacity to replenish freshwater supplies. Officials say growing demand from households, agriculture, industry, and expanding urban populations is placing increasing pressure on rivers, groundwater systems, reservoirs, and watersheds across the country.
Environmental experts explain that water bankruptcy does not mean the country has completely run out of water, but rather that current usage patterns are becoming unsustainable over the long term. Factors such as deforestation, watershed degradation, pollution, climate variability, and inefficient water infrastructure further intensify the problem. In Hydrology, maintaining balance between extraction and natural recharge is considered essential for long-term water security.
To address shortages, the government is accelerating science-based solutions including desalination systems, groundwater development, water refilling infrastructure, and improved distribution systems, especially in underserved communities. However, specialists emphasize that infrastructure alone will not solve the crisis. Long-term sustainability will also require stronger conservation policies, watershed protection, efficient irrigation systems, reduced water waste, and coordinated public participation.
Experts warn that without sustained action, increasing water stress could eventually affect agriculture, food security, public health, energy production, and economic stability. The situation highlights how freshwater management is becoming one of the most important environmental and development challenges of the century.
Science Department |