Manila, Philippines – Apart from just a few items of hanging laundry, the primary two flooring of 65-year-old Veronica Castillo’s three-storey residence are virtually empty.
“Our belongings are up high. We construct our homes upwards right here. Yearly the floods will scrape the ceilings of the second ground,” Castillo instructed Al Jazeera, surveying her residence in one among Marikina metropolis’s slums, among the many most flood-prone areas of Metro Manila.
However whereas the federal government is constructing a pumping station to handle the issue simply 5 minutes away, building has been occurring so lengthy that Castillo wonders whether or not it’s going to ever be completed. “It’s been eight years,” she stated.
Since taking workplace in 2022, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr has spent about half a trillion {dollars} to handle persistent flooding from excessive climate within the Philippines. However regardless of the numerous spending, cities proceed to be inundated in a rustic that usually sees about 20 typhoons a yr.
Throughout a speech in July, Marcos Jr boasted about his administration finishing greater than 5,000 flood management initiatives, of which 656 had been in Metro Manila.
Days later, Tremendous Storm Gaemi deposited a month’s value of rain on the world inside 24 hours, killing dozens and leaving components of the sprawling metropolis submerged.
Earlier this month, it was adopted by Tropical Storm Yagi. Officers put the price of the harm at 4.7 billion Philippine pesos ($84.3m) with almost seven million folks affected.
No less than a dozen extra typhoons are anticipated earlier than the top of the yr.
The Philippines has topped the World Risk Index‘s listing of nations struggling to deal with pure hazards for 16 years in a row. Based on the worldwide engineering group GHD, floods and storms will price the nation $124bn by 2050.
Some analysts say the federal government’s strategy is failing.
“No quantity of engineering can utterly management floods,” stated environmental geographer Timothy Cipriano from the scientist group AGHAM and the Philippine Regular College. “We’d be capable to management street-level flooding, however now we have uncared for the overflow from rivers and coastal areas.”
Cipriano notes that Metro Manila and its 12 close by provinces are “one massive basin surrounded with the coasts on some sides and the mountains on the opposite plus the numerous man-made actions means floor runoffs rapidly enhance, and thus, rivers overflow.”
Presently, the federal government has 9 “flagship” flood management initiatives within the pipeline. Every includes constructing concrete or “gray” infrastructure to empty or entice extra water.
At a public inquiry final August, the Division of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) chief, Manuel Bonoan, stated Marcos Jr’s accomplishments had been just for “rapid reduction” and admitted many big-ticket initiatives had encountered delays.
Authorities information exhibits that simply one of many smaller “flagship” initiatives was accomplished this yr, whereas the remaining have languished of their preparatory phases since no less than 2018.
This consists of the Metro Manila Flood Administration Venture, which goals to rehabilitate 36 pumping stations and construct 20 new ones by this yr. Regardless of a $415m World Financial institution mortgage, solely two stations have been rehabilitated and not one of the new ones have been accomplished.
The 60-kilometre (37-mile) Central Luzon-Pampanga floodway, meant to empty stormwater from Metro Manila, was supposed to start building in 2024. Nevertheless, final month, Bonoan conceded that delays had set the challenge again by three years.
The DPWH additionally reported that 70 % of Metro Manila’s “antiquated drainage system” was clogged with garbage and silt, hampering flood administration. It additionally reported that the nation lacks a nationwide flood management grasp plan, with solely 18 scattered plans for main river basins that are “nonetheless being at present up to date”.
Perspective shift
Most flood management efforts steer stormwater west to Manila Bay or Laguna Lake within the southeast. Nevertheless, civil engineering knowledgeable Guillermo Tabios III says this strategy has been ineffective for a few years, and generally simply transfers flood dangers to coastal communities.
“We divert round 2,500 cubic metres of water to Laguna Lake,” he stated, including that water additionally means “plenty of the encircling cities shall be submerged”.
Cipriano blames fast urbanisation and close by quarrying for strangling Metro Manila’s 31 rivers and their tributaries.
Throughout Gaemi, Merjelda Toralba, 70, spent almost 24 hours on the roof of her makeshift creek-side residence. She needed to tie a rope from her wood doorframe to a coconut tree to cease the rising present from carrying all the home downstream.
“The flooding is worse annually. And I’m extra afraid every time it rains exhausting. In only a few hours, I’d be trapped and the waters simply received’t go away,” she instructed Al Jazeera.
Environmental and sanitation knowledgeable Jose Antonio Montalban of Professional-Individuals Engineers and Leaders (Propel) says a lot of the brand new infrastructure is expensive to keep up.
In Yagi’s heavy downpours, sections of the Molino Riverdrive Venture collapsed as floodwaters spilled onto the roads. Montalban blames unavoidable erosion to the cement and doable substandard supplies, however “it was clearly over its most carrying capability. Now repairs will price taxpayers but once more”.
Montalban says what is required is a “holistic strategy” that considers “all components financial, ecological, hydrological and social. Sadly for us, rudimentary engineering purposes are the norm”.
Throughout Gaemi, the federal government admitted that 71 of the Metro Manila pumping stations had been unable to deal with the rainfall, which was greater than double the system’s 30mm/hour capability.
Cipriano says the authorities want to take a look at flood-prone areas as a “sponge metropolis. As a substitute of controlling water, you design areas to accommodate water. Make it much less of a concrete jungle, enable waters to seep or movement with out constricting rivers.”
Huge spender
Since 2015, the Philippine authorities has allotted 1.14 trillion Philippine pesos ($20.3bn) for flood management, with 48 % of it throughout the Marcos Jr administration.
Unbiased public finances analyst Zy-za Nadine Suzara says possible “patronage politics” was concerned after noticing that flood management was typically a last-minute insertion by legislators into the nationwide spending plan.
Regardless of a scarcity of dialogue in regards to the designs and strategies to handle floods, “immediately an enormous quantity of the flood management initiatives are added over the past week of finances laws”, she famous.
Congress has at present earmarked 779.38 billion Philippine pesos ($13.9bn) for the DPWH flood management efforts in 2025, roughly 12 % of the proposed nationwide finances.
Suzara says that flood management initiatives have at all times been thought of corruption-prone as a result of they lack mechanisms for exterior monitoring and infrequently escape any rigorous scrutiny earlier than the finances is finalised.
She referred to as it a “waste of fiscal house. These funds might have been used for one thing with significantly better planning for local weather change adaptation”.
For 2025, the Marcos Jr administration has tagged 1.01 trillion Philippine pesos ($18.1bn) of the finances as “inexperienced spending” or Local weather Change Expenditures, a rise of 84 %. This features a local weather lump sum, which implies its particular use has not been recognized. The lump sum was multiple billion Philippine pesos greater than in 2024.
“Local weather change shouldn’t be used as an excuse to steal from the folks’s coffers,” Congress Assistant Minority Chief Arlene Brosas instructed Al Jazeera.
Marcos Jr has acknowledged the taint of corruption and requested senators to look into the difficulty throughout final yr’s hurricane season.
Senator Joel Villanueva, a vocal advocate for higher flood administration, stated he’ll “file circumstances towards those that should be held liable”. Thus far, no particular person has been prosecuted. Villanueva says he’s getting ready to sort out the matter once more in upcoming senate proceedings.
Brosas added: “The folks deserve transparency and accountability in local weather expenditures. Funds should be channelled into legit local weather adaptation programmes relatively than into the pockets of corrupt officers.”
Colleges typically double as evacuation centres for communities affected by floods. Classes are postponed in order that dozens of households can take shelter within the school rooms, surviving on meals donations.
“It’s exhausting, mendacity on moist mats in crowded rooms, wishing for higher climate,” stated Castillo, who rushes her 5 grandchildren to the closest evacuation centre each time there’s a threat of floods.
Ought to the federal government fail to repair the issue of flooding, residents like Castillo face the prospect of many extra years crowding into evacuation centres as they await the floodwaters to subside.