Baguio to drill 30 more deep wells to mitigate effects of El Niño

By Liza Agoot

February 15, 2024, 5:05 pm

<p><strong>WATER DRILLING</strong>. The Baguio Water District targets to have 30 additional deep wells within three years to boost its supply. BWD manager engineer Salvador Royeca, in a media interview on Thursday (Feb. 15, 2024), said the deep well drilling project is not just a long-term El Niño mitigating measure but a program to ensure adequate supply to address increasing demand for potable water as economic activities continue to rise. (<em>PNA file photo courtesy of BWD)</em></p>

WATER DRILLING. The Baguio Water District targets to have 30 additional deep wells within three years to boost its supply. BWD manager engineer Salvador Royeca, in a media interview on Thursday (Feb. 15, 2024), said the deep well drilling project is not just a long-term El Niño mitigating measure but a program to ensure adequate supply to address increasing demand for potable water as economic activities continue to rise. (PNA file photo courtesy of BWD)

BAGUIO CITY – The Baguio Water District (BWD) targets to drill 30 additional deep wells until 2026 to boost water supply and cushion the impact of El Niño phenomenon, which happens every three to seven years.

Engineer Salvador Royeca, manager of the city’s sole water concessionaire, told journalists Thursday that each deep well is capable of producing at least 140 gallons per minute, boosting the supply from the 68 existing wells that provide water to at least 90 percent of the city’s household.

The additional deep wells, works on some have been started, will provide an average additional supply of 10,000 cubic meters per day, he said.

“The deep well drilling project, amounting to about PHP6 million to PHP10 million a unit, is an El Niño mitigating measure of the BWD that will also address the increasing demand for potable water in households and commercial establishments,” he said.

The project is being financed through internally-generated funds and a loan from the Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP).

To date, the water concessionaire sources its supply partly from four springs and the two catchment basins namely the Busol watershed and the catchment reservoir at Mount Santo Tomas. (PNA)

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