By Fernan Angeles
San Miguel Corp. (SMC) would be doing things right insofar as the government’s repeated failed attempts to bring back life at the Pasig River.
In a statement, SMC President and Chief Operating Officer Ramon Ang said they would clean up and revive the Pasig River as part of its commitment in the multi-billion peso Pasig River Expressway (PAREX) project.
“Of all the projects we have done, this will perhaps be among the most challenging, and at the same time, the most fulfilling,” SMC president and COO Ramon Ang said in a statement.
“Not only will we be building a much-needed direct link between eastern and western Metro Manila, but we will also be leading a historic effort to bring the Pasig River back to health,” he added.
SMC is the proponent of a P95.4-billion PAREX project, which is now with the government for review.
The PAREX project, Ang explained, represents a “solution within a solution” that would see such huge construction project designed to ease Metro Manila traffic, without actually disrupting existing cities and roads.
He added that the project has a “with a built-in solution to clean up and improve the flow of water throughout the entire length of the Pasig River.”
Part of the multi-billion project is dredging of the Pasig River.
Ang further said that to build the 19.4-kilometer, six-lane elevated expressway along the banks of the river, the river bed has to be dredged and cleared of decades of debris and garbage, to attain its optimum depth and ensure the constant flow of water, thus addressing flooding in Metro Manila.
“For so many decades, even when I was young, the Pasig River had been synonymous to pollution. Many Filipinos have long wanted to clean it and revive it, bring it back to its old glory. There were even high-profile fund-raising projects and similar initiatives to clean it. But unfortunately, not much has changed,” he said.
SMC earlier this year started a P1-billion corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiative to clean up the Tullahan-Tinajeros River System as part of a “wide-ranging” plan to support the government cleanup of the Manila Bay, and address perennial flooding in low-lying areas such as Bulacan and other Central Luzon provinces.
In its August report, the company had extracted 20,000 cubic meters or 2,150 truck-loads of silt and garbage from a 5.25 km stretch of the Tullahan from Malabon to Navotas, which constitutes the first phase of the project in just two months.
SMC has also reported to be removing some 600 tons of solid waste from the river every day.
The Pasig River Expressway, which will start from the port area in Manila and end at a connection to the Circumferential Road 6 (C-6), is seen to reduce travel time from Manila to Rizal to just 15 minutes.
From the port area in Manila, it will have entry and exit points at the University Belt area, San Juan, Buendia, Mandaluyong, Makati, Rockwell, Edsa, Pioneer St., Bonifacio Global City, C5, before terminating at C6.
It is seen to provide an alternative and faster access to the country’s largest business districts—Makati, Ortigas, and BGC.
Along with the PAREX project, SMC is also proposing to build the 420-kilometer, four-lane South Luzon Expressway Toll Road 5 (SLEX-TR5) project which extends the SLEX and SLEX-TR4 project from Lucena, Quezon to Matnog, Sorsogon.
Both projects are under a proposed Built-Operate-Transfer scheme for a concession of just 30 years, after which, government takes over the vital infrastructure assets.