DSWD, LGUs Bring Christmas Cheers To Kanlaon Evacuees

Isang makabuluhang Pasko para sa mga evacuees ng Kanlaon sa tulong ng DSWD at mga LGUs.

Borongan City Logs Rise In Tourist Arrivals With Regular Flights

Ang mga regular na flights mula Manila at Cebu ay nagdala ng higit pang bisita sa Borongan City.

President Marcos To Ensure 2025 Budget Items ‘Conform To Constitution’

Ayon kay Lucas Bersamin, ang 2025 GAA ay dapat sumunod sa konstitusyon, pangako ni Pangulong Marcos.

Infra Development, Aid Support Ramped Up As El Niño, La Niña Tested Philippines

Sa panahon ng pagsubok, ang gobyerno ay nagsisikap upang maibsan ang epekto ng El Niño at La Niña sa buhay ng mga tao.

Davao Oriental To Hand Over Mindanao’s Biggest Irrigation Dam To NIA

The Davao Oriental provincial government plans to turn over Mindanao's biggest irrigation project to the National Irrigation Administration to maximize the dam's operation and assistance to rice farmers.
By The Visayas Journal

Davao Oriental To Hand Over Mindanao’s Biggest Irrigation Dam To NIA

0
0

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

Mindanao’s biggest irrigation project of the Davao Oriental provincial government is set to be turned over soon to the National Irrigation Administration (NIA).

In a statement Wednesday, Governor Corazon Malanyaon said the provincial government decided to turn over the Cateel Irrigation Project (CIP) and its management to NIA to help maximize the dam’s operation and support the province’s efforts to boost rice sufficiency.

With NIA having sufficient funds and technical expertise to maintain the dam, Malanyaon said the provincial government is confident that the facility will function to its fullest for the benefit of local farmers.

“The full operation of the dam is critical to the province’s goal of achieving food security through rice sufficiency,” she said.

Funded under the Mindanao Rural Development Program, the CIP will provide sustainable irrigation water to approximately 1,600 hectares of suitable lands, covering 11 barangays.

The dam’s construction started in Nov. 2011 but was halted due to Typhoon Pablo and completed in 2014.

With a PHP498-million budget, the infrastructure was the last of the big-ticket projects of the 15-year Mindanao development program.

“While it is hard to let it go since it was our legacy project, there is an urgency to turn over its management to the agency due to the province’s current financial challenges,” Malanyaon said.

This year, the province is set to undergo a PHP400 million budget cut from its share of the national income due to the pandemic. (PNA)