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Ondoy aftermath

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

It came and shocked all of us. We never expected that it would come this early. Although we’ve been warning people that in the near future our environment would show us its full force, we never thought that the near future we’re talking about refers to the present already.

The destruction that Ondoy brought us made many of us realize that it is high time that we take our environment seriously. Being the stewards of the environment, we’ve been tasked to make sure that the next generation would still have adequate resources for them to be able to have a life that not only facilitates physical but, more importantly, human development. 

The problem, however, is that instead of working together, people, especially the powers that be, have started the blame game. Nobody wants to take responsibility (except for Bayani Fernando who, admitted his responsibility for the flooding). The DENR Secretary wants to sue the LLDA Chair. The LLDA Chair, on the other hand, blames the DENR Secretary. The local government officials concerned are very silent as to what they have failed to do to prepare for a deluge like Ondoy. These officials should be reminded that the management of the environment is one of the services decentralized to them.

I believe that every one of us should be blamed for what had happened. It is not just the government. The people’s way of living also aggravated the effects of Ondoy. The world has seen how we have been helping each other during and after the deluge that’s Ondoy. It is high time that we show to the world that we are ready to take our responsibility as stewards of the environment. 

Posted by enpgamboa at 5:45 pm | permalink | Add comment

Planetary Malpractice: A Prod to Government Leaders

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

In the last few decades, the world has witnessed the fury of Nature- the Americas experienced its strongest hurricanes ever; the Asia Pacific Region witnessed its most destructive typhoons and tornados; there have been unexpected perilous floods; and, so on and so forth. The environment, more particularly the climate system, has changed. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change attributed these catastrophic changes in our climate system to global warming. It concluded with high probability that this change in climate is driven more than by anthropogenic factors rather than natural variability.

Global climate change presents new and unique challenges to the current Philippine legal framework for the protection of the environment. The concern today is how government leaders could be compelled to take serious, sustained and effective actions in addressing climate change. This paper proposes the idea that a novel concept of planetary malpractice, which is based on the principles of professional negligence, can be applied even if the current legal framework is not changed. This can be done by using the landmark environmental cases, such as Oposa vs. Factoran, Jr. that breathed life to the Constitutional right to a balanced and healthful ecology, in arguing that the violation of this right by a government leader is beyond the protection from being sued accorded to them by the Administrative Code of 1987.

In the analysis, the usual defense of lack of cause of action and standing, non-justiciability, and the general rule that public officials are not capable of being sued except for certain specific circumstances provided for by law, can be hurdled without difficulty if the current trend in jurisprudence is taken into consideration. This paper argues that the Supreme Court considers environmental cases as one of transcendental importance calling for the relaxation of procedural rules.

It is recommended, however, that the right to a balanced and healthful ecology be stated in clear in terms by amending Article 32 of the Civil Code so that there will be no ambiguity in terms of the applicability of planetary malpractice in Philippine jurisprudence.

Posted by enpgamboa at 11:06 am | permalink | Add comment

6.8 EARTHQUAKE

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Early this morning, I received this sms saying that a 6.8 earthquake is predicted by the US GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY in Hawaii to hit Philippine plates tonight, 15 May 2008. Although I do not discount the possibility that the Philippines will experience a strong earthquake sooner or later (our country lies on an earthquake belt), I have some apprehensions about the 6.8 earthquake prediction.

First, I think that the agency in the United States that is considered to be the authority on earthquakes is the US GEOLOGICAL SURVEY. This actually is the US counterpart of our very own PHIVOLCS. I did not know that a certain US Geological Society exists.

Second, I took up a few Geology major subjects under my B.S. Geology program at NIGS  and we were taught that nobody can predict earthquake as we can predict storms and typhoons. Hence, this US Geological Society prediction about the 6.8 earthquake is something new to me. I thought that even the most advanced USGS cannot predict earthquakes but here is the US Geological Society predicting not just the occurence of an earthquake but also the time as well as the magnitude of it. If ever the US Geological Society really exists, I believe that the person who started this 6.8 earthquake prediction should be held accountable.

One good thing that this sms brings us, though, is that people are becoming more aware and alert on the possibility of the occurence of a destructive earthquake in the Philippines. Most of us actually might not be aware but since January 2008 until 14 May 2008, the Philippines has experienced more than eighty earhquakes with magnitudes ranging from 1.9 to 6.5 (PHIVOLCS, Latest Earthquake Information, see the list). 

There is no need to panic. Let’s just be more alert and be always prepared because the occurence of a strong, desctructive earthquake in the Philippines is not remote. And, let us all wait for the clarification and announcement from PHIVOLCS officials. 

Posted by enpgamboa at 6:30 am | permalink | Add comment