Republic of the
Philippines
Supreme Court
Manila
EN BANC
BORACAY FOUNDATION, INC., Petitioner, - versus - THE PROVINCE OF AKLAN, REPRESENTED BY GOVERNOR
CARLITO S. MARQUEZ, THE
PHILIPPINE RECLAMATION AUTHORITY, AND THE DENR-EMB (REGION VI),
Respondents. |
|
G.R. No. 196870 Present: CARPIO, VELASCO, JR., LEONARDO-DE
CASTRO, BRION, PERALTA, BERSAMIN, DEL CASTILLO, ABAD, VILLARAMA,
JR., PEREZ, MENDOZA,* SERENO, REYES, and PERLAS-BERNABE,
JJ. Promulgated: June 26, 2012 |
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LEONARDO-DE
CASTRO, J.:
In resolving this controversy, the Court took
into consideration that all the parties involved share common goals in pursuit
of certain primordial State policies and principles that are enshrined in the
Constitution and pertinent laws, such as the protection of the environment, the
empowerment of the local government units, the promotion of tourism, and the
encouragement of the participation of the private sector. The Court seeks to reconcile the respective
roles, duties and responsibilities of the petitioner and respondents in
achieving these shared goals within the context of our Constitution, laws and
regulations.
Nature
of the Case
This
is an original petition for the issuance of an Environmental Protection Order
in the nature of a continuing mandamus under
A.M. No. 09-6-8-SC, otherwise known as the Rules of Procedure for Environmental
Cases, promulgated on April 29, 2010.
The
Parties
Petitioner
Boracay Foundation, Inc. (petitioner) is a duly registered, non-stock domestic
corporation. Its primary purpose is to
foster a united, concerted and environment-conscious development of Boracay
Island, thereby preserving and maintaining its culture, natural beauty and
ecological balance, marking the island as the crown jewel of Philippine
tourism, a prime tourist destination in Asia and the whole world.[1] It counts among its members at least sixty
(60) owners and representatives of resorts, hotels, restaurants, and similar
institutions; at least five community organizations; and several
environmentally-conscious residents and advocates.[2]
Respondent
Province of Aklan (respondent Province) is a political subdivision of the
government created pursuant to Republic Act No. 1414, represented by Honorable
Carlito S. Marquez, the Provincial Governor (Governor Marquez).
Respondent
Philippine Reclamation Authority (respondent PRA), formerly called the Public
Estates Authority (PEA), is a government entity created by Presidential Decree
No. 1084,[3] which
states that one of the purposes for which respondent PRA was created was to
reclaim land, including foreshore and submerged areas. PEA eventually became the lead agency primarily
responsible for all reclamation projects in the country under Executive Order
No. 525, series of 1979. In June 2006,
the President of the Philippines issued Executive Order No. 543, delegating the
power to approve reclamation projects to PRA through its governing Board,
subject to compliance with existing laws and rules and further subject to the
condition that reclamation contracts to be executed with any person or entity
(must) go through public bidding.[4]
Respondent
Department of Environment and Natural Resources Environmental Management
Bureau (DENR-EMB), Regional Office VI (respondent DENR-EMB RVI), is the
government agency in the Western Visayas Region authorized to issue
environmental compliance certificates regarding projects that require the
environments protection and management in the region.[5]
Summary of Antecedent
Facts
Boracay Island (Boracay), a tropical paradise located in the
Western Visayas region of the Philippines and one of the countrys most popular
tourist destinations, was declared a tourist zone and marine reserve in 1973 under
Presidential Proclamation No. 1801.[6] The island comprises the barangays of Manoc-manoc, Balabag, and Yapak, all within the
municipality of Malay, in the province of Aklan.[7]
Petitioner describes Boracay as follows:
Boracay is well-known for its distinctive powdery white-sand
beaches which are the product of the unique ecosystem dynamics of the area. The
island itself is known to come from the uplifted remnants of an ancient reef
platform. Its beaches, the sandy land strip between the water and the area
currently occupied by numerous establishments, is the primary draw for domestic
and international tourists for its color, texture and other unique
characteristics. Needless to state, it is the premier domestic and
international tourist destination in the Philippines.[8]
More than a
decade ago, respondent Province built the Caticlan Jetty Port and Passenger
Terminal at Barangay Caticlan to be the main gateway to Boracay. It also built the corresponding Cagban Jetty
Port and Passenger Terminal to be the receiving end for tourists in
Boracay. Respondent Province operates
both ports to provide structural facilities suited for locals, tourists and
guests and to provide safety and security measures.[9]
In 2005,
Boracay 2010 Summit was held and participated in by representatives from
national government agencies, local government units (LGUs), and the private
sector. Petitioner was one of the organizers and participants thereto. The Summit aimed to re-establish a common
vision of all stakeholders to ensure the conservation, restoration, and
preservation of Boracay Island and to develop an action plan that [would
allow] all sectors to work in concert among and with each other for the long
term benefit and sustainability of the island and the community.[10] The Summit yielded a Terminal Report[11]
stating that the participants had shared their dream of having world-class
land, water and air infrastructure, as well as given their observations that
government support was lacking, infrastructure was poor, and, more importantly,
the influx of tourists to Boracay was increasing. The Report showed that there was a need to
expand the port facilities at Caticlan due to congestion in the holding area of
the existing port, caused by inadequate facilities, thus tourists suffered long
queues while waiting for the boat ride going to the island.[12]
Respondent Province
claimed that tourist arrivals to Boracay reached approximately 649,559 in 2009
and 779,666 in 2010, and this was expected to reach a record of 1 million
tourist arrivals in the years to come. Thus,
respondent Province conceptualized the expansion of the port facilities at Barangay
Caticlan.[13]
The Sangguniang Barangay of
Caticlan, Malay Municipality, issued Resolution
No. 13, s. 2008[14]
on April 25, 2008 stating that it had learned that respondent Province had
filed an application with the DENR for a foreshore lease of areas along the
shorelines of Barangay Caticlan, and manifesting its strong opposition to said
application, as the proposed foreshore lease practically covered almost all the
coastlines of said barangay, thereby
technically diminishing its territorial jurisdiction, once granted, and
depriving its constituents of their statutory right of preference in the
development and utilization of the natural resources within its jurisdiction. The resolution further stated that respondent
Province did not conduct any consultations with the Sangguniang Barangay of
Caticlan regarding the proposed foreshore lease, which failure the Sanggunian considered as an act of bad
faith on the part of respondent Province.[15]
On November 20, 2008, the Sangguniang Panlalawigan of respondent
Province approved Resolution No.
2008-369,[16]
formally authorizing Governor Marquez to enter into negotiations towards the
possibility of effecting self-liquidating and income-producing development and
livelihood projects to be financed through bonds, debentures, securities,
collaterals, notes or other obligations as provided under Section 299 of the
Local Government Code, with the following priority projects: (a)
renovation/rehabilitation of the Caticlan/Cagban Passenger Terminal Buildings
and Jetty Ports; and (b) reclamation of a portion of Caticlan foreshore for
commercial purposes.[17] This step was taken as respondent Provinces existing
jetty port and passenger terminal was funded through bond flotation, which was
successfully redeemed and paid ahead of the target date. This was allegedly cited as one of the LGUs
Best Practices wherein respondent Province was given the appropriate commendation.[18]
Respondent Province included the
proposed expansion of the port facilities at Barangay Caticlan in its 2009
Annual Investment Plan,[19] envisioned
as its project site the area adjacent to the existing jetty port, and identified
additional areas along the coastline of Barangay Caticlan as the site for
future project expansion.[20]
Governor
Marquez sent a letter to respondent PRA on March 12, 2009[21]
expressing the interest of respondent Province to reclaim about 2.64 hectares of land along the
foreshores of Barangay Caticlan, Municipality of Malay, Province of Aklan.
Sometime
in April 2009, respondent Province entered into an agreement with the Financial
Advisor/Consultant that won in the bidding process held a month before, to
conduct the necessary feasibility study of the proposed project for the
Renovation/Rehabilitation of the Caticlan Passenger Terminal Building and Jetty
Port, Enhancement and Recovery of Old Caticlan Coastline, and Reclamation of a
Portion of Foreshore for Commercial Purposes (the Marina Project), in Malay, Aklan.[22]
Subsequently,
on May 7, 2009, the Sangguniang
Panlalawigan of respondent Province issued Resolution No. 2009110,[23]
which authorized Governor Marquez to
file an application to reclaim the 2.64 hectares of foreshore area in Caticlan,
Malay, Aklan with respondent PRA.
Sometime
in July 2009, the Financial Advisor/Consultant came up with a feasibility study
which focused on the land reclamation of 2.64 hectares by way of beach enhancement
and recovery of the old Caticlan coastline for the rehabilitation and expansion
of the existing jetty port, and for its future plans the construction of
commercial building and wellness center. The financial component of the said study was Two
Hundred Sixty Million Pesos (P260,000,000.00). Its suggested financing scheme was bond
flotation.[24]
Meanwhile, the Sangguniang Bayan of the Municipality of Malay expressed its strong
opposition to the intended foreshore lease application, through Resolution No. 044,[25]
approved on July 22, 2009, manifesting therein that respondent Provinces
foreshore lease application was for business enterprise purposes for its
benefit, at the expense of the local government of Malay, which by statutory
provisions was the rightful entity to develop, utilize and reap benefits from
the natural resources found within its jurisdiction.[26]
In August 2009, a Preliminary
Geohazard Assessment[27] for
the enhancement/expansion of the existing Caticlan Jetty Port and Passenger
Terminal through beach zone restoration and Protective Marina Developments in
Caticlan, Malay, Aklan was completed.
Thereafter, Governor Marquez
submitted an Environmental Performance Report and Monitoring Program
(EPRMP)[28] to
DENR-EMB RVI, which he had attached to his letter[29]
dated September 19, 2009, as an initial step for securing an Environmental
Compliance Certificate (ECC). The letter
reads in part:
With the project expected to
start its construction implementation next month, the province hereby assures your
good office that it will give preferential attention to and shall comply with
whatever comments that you may have on this EPRMP.[30] (Emphasis added.)
Respondent
Province was then authorized to issue Caticlan Super Marina Bonds for the
purpose of funding the renovation of the Caticlan Jetty Port and Passenger
Terminal Building, and the reclamation of a portion of the foreshore lease area
for commercial purposes in Malay, Aklan through Provincial Ordinance No. 2009-013, approved on September 10, 2009. The said ordinance authorized Governor Marquez
to negotiate, sign and execute agreements in relation to the issuance of the
Caticlan Super Marina Bonds in the amount not exceeding P260,000,000.00.[31]
Subsequently,
the Sangguniang Panlalawigan of the
Province of Aklan issued Provincial
Ordinance No. 2009-015[32]
on October 1, 2009, amending Provincial Ordinance No. 2009-013, authorizing the
bond flotation of the Province of Aklan through Governor Marquez to fund the
Marina Project and appropriate the entire proceeds of said bonds for the project,
and further authorizing Governor Marquez to negotiate, sign and execute
contracts or agreements pertinent to the transaction.[33]
Within the same month of October
2009, respondent Province deliberated on the possible expansion from its
original proposed reclamation area of 2.64 hectares to forty (40) hectares in
order to maximize the utilization of its resources and as a response to the
findings of the Preliminary Geohazard Assessment study which showed that the recession
and retreat of the shoreline caused by coastal erosion and scouring should be
the first major concern in the project site and nearby coastal area. The study likewise indicated the
vulnerability of the coastal zone within the proposed project site and the
nearby coastal area due to the effects of sea level rise and climate change
which will greatly affect the social, economic, and environmental situation of
Caticlan and nearby Malay coastal communities.[34]
In his letter dated October 22,
2009 addressed to respondent PRA, Governor Marquez wrote:
With our
substantial compliance with the requirements under Administrative Order No.
2007-2 relative to our request to PRA for approval of the reclamation of the
[proposed Beach Zone Restoration and Protection Marine Development in Barangays
Caticlan and Manoc-Manoc] and as a result of our discussion during the [meeting
with the respondent PRA on October 12, 2009], may we respectfully submit a revised Reclamation Project Description
embodying certain revisions/changes in the size and location of the
areas to be reclaimed. x x x.
On
another note, we are pleased to inform your Office that the bond flotation we
have secured with the Local Government Unit Guarantee Corporation (LGUGC) has
been finally approved last October 14, 2009. This will pave the way for the
implementation of said project. Briefly, the Province has been recognized by
the Bureau of Local Government Finance (BLGF) for its capability to meet its
loan obligations. x x x.
With the
continued increase of tourists coming to Boracay through Caticlan, the Province
is venturing into such development project with the end in view of protection
and/or restoring certain segments of the shoreline in Barangays Caticlan
(Caticlan side) and Manoc-manoc (Boracay side) which, as reported by experts,
has been experiencing tremendous coastal erosion.
For the
project to be self-liquidating, however, we will be developing the reclaimed
land for commercial and tourism-related facilities and for other complementary
uses.[35]
(Emphasis ours.)
Then, on
November 19, 2009, the Sangguniang
Panlalawigan enacted Resolution No.
2009-299[36]
authorizing Governor Marquez to enter into a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) with
respondent PRA in the implementation of the Beach Zone Restoration and Protection
Marina Development Project, which shall
reclaim a total of 40 hectares in the areas adjacent to the jetty ports at Barangay
Caticlan and Barangay Manoc-manoc. The Sangguniang Panlalawigan approved the
terms and conditions of the necessary agreements for the implementation of the
bond flotation of respondent Province to fund the renovation/rehabilitation of
the existing jetty port by way of enhancement and recovery of the Old Caticlan
shoreline through reclamation of an area of 2.64 hectares in the amount of P260,000,000.00 on December
1, 2009.[37]
Respondent
Province gave an initial presentation of the project with consultation to the Sangguniang Bayan of Malay[38]
on December 9, 2009.
Respondent PRA approved the reclamation project on April 20,
2010 in its Resolution No. 4094 and authorized
its General Manager/Chief Executive Officer (CEO) to enter into a MOA with
respondent Province for the implementation of the reclamation project.[39]
On April 27,
2010, DENR-EMB RVI issued to respondent Province ECC-R6-1003-096-7100 (the questioned ECC) for Phase 1 of the
Reclamation Project to the extent of 2.64
hectares to be done along the Caticlan side beside the existing jetty port.[40]
On May 17,
2010, respondent Province entered into a MOA[41]
with respondent PRA. Under Article III, the Project was described therein as
follows:
The proposed Aklan Beach Zone Restoration and Protection
Marina Development Project involves the reclamation and development of
approximately forty (40) hectares of foreshore and offshore
areas of the Municipality of Malay x x x.
The land use development of the reclamation project shall be
for commercial, recreational and institutional and other applicable uses.[42]
(Emphases supplied.)
It was at this point that respondent Province deemed it necessary
to conduct a series of what it calls information-education campaigns, which provided
the venue for interaction and dialogue with the public, particularly the Barangay and Municipal officials of the
Municipality of Malay, the residents of Barangay Caticlan and Boracay, the
stakeholders, and the non-governmental organizations (NGOs). The details of the campaign are summarized as
follows[43]:
a. June
17, 2010 at Casa Pilar Beach Resort, Boracay Island, Malay, Aklan;[44]
b. July
28, 2010 at Caticlan Jetty Port and Passenger Terminal;[45]
c. July
31, 2010 at Barangay Caticlan Plaza;[46]
d. September
15, 2010 at the Office of the Provincial Governor with Municipal Mayor of Malay
Mayor John P. Yap;[47]
e. October
12, 2010 at the Office of the Provincial Governor with the Provincial
Development Council Executive Committee;[48]
and
f. October
29, 2010 at the Office of the Provincial Governor with Officials of LGU-Malay
and Petitioner.[49]
Petitioner
claims that during the public consultation meeting belatedly called by
respondent Province on June 17, 2010, respondent Province presented the
Reclamation Project and only then detailed the actions that it had already
undertaken, particularly: the issuance of the Caticlan Super Marina Bonds; the
execution of the MOA with respondent PRA; the alleged conduct of an Environmental
Impact Assessment (EIA) study for the reclamation project; and the expansion of the project to forty (40) hectares from 2.64 hectares.[50]
In Resolution No. 046, Series of 2010, adopted on June 23, 2010, the
Malay Municipality reiterated its strong opposition to respondent Provinces
project and denied its request for a favorable endorsement of
the Marina Project.[51]
The Malay Municipality
subsequently issued Resolution No. 016,
Series of 2010, adopted on August 3, 2010, to request respondent PRA not to
grant reclamation permit and notice to proceed to the Marina Project of the
[respondent] Provincial Government of Aklan located at Caticlan, Malay, Aklan.[52]
In a letter[53]
dated October 12, 2010, petitioner informed respondent PRA of its opposition to
the reclamation project, primarily for the reason that, based on the opinion of
Dr. Porfirio M. Alio, an expert from the University of the Philippines Marine
Science Institute (UPMSI), which he rendered based on the documents submitted
by respondent Province to obtain the ECC, a full EIA study is required to
assess the reclamation projects likelihood of rendering critical and lasting
effect on Boracay considering the proximity in distance, geographical location,
current and wind direction, and many other environmental considerations in the
area. Petitioner noted that said documents had failed to deal with coastal
erosion concerns in Boracay. It also
noted that respondent Province failed to comply with certain mandatory provisions
of the Local Government Code, particularly, those requiring the project
proponent to conduct consultations with stakeholders.
Petitioner likewise transmitted
its Resolution No. 001, Series of 2010,
registering its opposition to the reclamation project to respondent Province,
respondent PRA, respondent DENR-EMB, the National Economic Development
Authority Region VI, the Malay Municipality, and other concerned entities.[54]
Petitioner alleges that despite
the Malay Municipalitys denial of respondent Provinces request for a favorable endorsement, as
well as the strong opposition manifested both by Barangay Caticlan and
petitioner as an NGO, respondent Province still continued with the
implementation of the Reclamation Project.[55]
On July 26,
2010, the Sangguniang Panlalawigan of
respondent Province set aside Resolution
No. 046, s. 2010, of the
Municipality of Malay and manifested its support for the implementation of
the aforesaid project through its Resolution
No. 2010-022.[56]
On July 27,
2010, the MOA was confirmed by respondent PRA Board of Directors under its Resolution No. 4130. Respondent PRA
wrote to respondent Province on October 19, 2010, informing the latter to proceed with the reclamation and
development of phase 1 of site 1 of its proposed project. Respondent PRA
attached to said letter its Evaluation Report dated October 18, 2010.[57]
Petitioner
likewise received a copy of respondent PRAs letter dated October 19, 2010,
which authorized respondent Province to proceed with phase 1 of the reclamation
project, subject to compliance with the requirements of its Evaluation Report. The reclamation project was described as:
[A] seafront development involving reclamation of an
aggregate area of more or less, forty
(40) hectares in two (2) separate sites both in Malay Municipality, Aklan
Province. Site 1 is in Brgy. Caticlan
with a total area of 36.82 hectares and Site 2 in Brgy. Manoc-Manoc, Boracay
Island with a total area of 3.18 hectares. Sites 1 and 2 are on the
opposite sides of Tabon Strait, about 1,200 meters apart. x x x. [58]
(Emphases added.)
The Sangguniang Panlalawigan of Aklan,
through Resolution No. 2010-034,[59] addressed the apprehensions of
petitioner embodied in its Resolution No. 001, s. 2010, and supported the
implementation of the project. Said
resolution stated that the apprehensions of petitioner with regard to the
economic, social and political negative impacts of the projects were mere
perceptions and generalities and were not anchored on definite scientific,
social and political studies.
In the
meantime, a study was commissioned by the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and
Industry-Boracay (PCCI-Boracay), funded by the Department of Tourism (DOT) with the assistance of, among others,
petitioner. The study was conducted in
November 2010 by several marine biologists/experts from the Marine
Environmental Resources Foundation (MERF) of the UPMSI. The study was intended to determine the
potential impact of a reclamation project in the hydrodynamics of the strait
and on the coastal erosion patterns in the southern coast of Boracay Island and
along the coast of Caticlan.[60]
After noting
the objections of the respective LGUs of Caticlan and Malay, as well as the
apprehensions of petitioner, respondent Province issued a notice to the contractor
on December 1, 2010 to commence with the construction of the project.[61]
On April 4,
2011, the Sangguniang Panlalawigan of
Aklan, through its Committee on Cooperatives, Food, Agriculture, and
Environmental Protection and the Committee on Tourism, Trade, Industry and
Commerce, conducted a joint committee hearing wherein the study undertaken by
the MERF-UPMSI was discussed.[62] In attendance were Mr. Ariel Abriam,
President of PCCI-Boracay, representatives from the Provincial Government, and
Dr. Cesar Villanoy, a professor from the UPMSI.
Dr. Villanoy said that the subject project, consisting of 2.64 hectares, would only have insignificant effect on the
hydrodynamics of the strait traversing the coastline of Barangay Caticlan and
Boracay, hence, there was a distant
possibility that it would affect the Boracay coastline, which includes the
famous white-sand beach of the island.[63]
Thus, on April
6, 2011, the Sangguniang Panlalawigan
of Aklan enacted Resolution No. 2011-065[64] noting the report on the survey of the
channel between Caticlan and Boracay conducted by the UPMSI in relation to the
effects of the ongoing reclamation to Boracay beaches, and stating that Dr.
Villanoy had admitted that nowhere in their study was it pointed out that there
would be an adverse effect on the white-sand beach of Boracay.
During the
First Quarter Regular Meeting of the Regional Development Council, Region VI (RDC-VI)
on April 16, 2011, it approved and supported the subject project (covering 2.64
hectares) through RDC-VI Resolution No.
VI-26, series of 2011.[65]
Subsequently,
Mr. Abriam sent a letter to Governor Marquez dated April 25, 2011 stating that
the study conducted by the UPMSI confirms that the water flow across the
Caticlan-Boracay channel is primarily tide-driven, therefore, the marine
scientists believe that the 2.64-hectare project of respondent Province would
not significantly affect the flow in the channel and would unlikely impact the Boracay
beaches. Based on this, PCCI-Boracay stated that it was not opposing the 2.64-hectare
Caticlan reclamation project on environmental grounds.[66]
On June 1,
2011, petitioner filed the instant Petition for Environmental Protection
Order/Issuance of the Writ of Continuing Mandamus.
On June 7, 2011, this Court issued a Temporary Environmental Protection Order
(TEPO) and ordered the respondents to file their respective comments to the
petition.[67]
After receiving
a copy of the TEPO on June 9, 2011, respondent Province immediately issued an
order to the Provincial Engineering Office and the concerned contractor to
cease and desist from conducting any construction activities until further
orders from this Court.
The
petition is premised on the following grounds:
I.
The
respondent Province, proponent of the reclamation project, failed to comply
with relevant rules and regulations in the acquisition of an ECC.
A.
The reclamation project is co-located within
environmentally critical areas requiring the performance of a full, or
programmatic, environmental impact assessment.
B. Respondent Province failed to obtain the favorable
endorsement of the LGU concerned.
C. Respondent Province failed to conduct the required
consultation procedures as required by the Local Government Code.
D. Respondent Province failed to perform a full
environmental impact assessment as required by law and relevant regulations.
II.
The
reclamation of land bordering the strait between Caticlan and Boracay shall
adversely affect the frail ecological balance of the area.[68]
Petitioner
objects to respondent Provinces classification of the reclamation project as
single instead of co-located, as non-environmentally critical, and as a mere
rehabilitation of the existing jetty port. Petitioner points out that the reclamation
project is on two sites (which are situated on the opposite sides of Tabon
Strait, about 1,200 meters apart):
36.82 hectares Site 1, in Bgy.
Caticlan
3.18 hectares Site 2, in Manoc-manoc,
Boracay Island[69]
Phase 1, which
was started in December 2010 without the necessary permits,[70]
is located on the Caticlan side of a narrow strait separating mainland Aklan
from Boracay. In the implementation of
the project, respondent Province obtained only an ECC to conduct Phase 1,
instead of an ECC on the entire 40 hectares. Thus, petitioner argues that respondent
Province abused and exploited the Revised
Procedural Manual for DENR
Administrative Order No. 30, Series of 2003 (DENR DAO 2003-30)[71]
relating to the acquisition of an ECC by:
1. Declaring
the reclamation project under Group II
Projects-Non-ECP (environmentally critical project) in ECA (environmentally
critical area) based on the type and size of the area, and
2. Failing
to declare the reclamation project as a co-located project application which
would have required the Province to submit a Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (PEIS)[72]
or Programmatic Environmental [Performance]
Report Management Plan (PE[P]RMP).[73] (Emphases ours.)
Petitioner
further alleges that the Revised Procedural Manual (on which the classification
above is based, which merely requires an Environmental Impact Statement [EIS]
for Group II projects) is patently ultra
vires, and respondent DENR-EMB RVI committed grave abuse of discretion
because the laws on EIS, namely, Presidential Decree Nos. 1151 and 1586, as
well as Presidential Proclamation No. 2146, clearly indicate that projects in
environmentally critical areas are to be immediately considered environmentally
critical. Petitioner complains that respondent Province applied for an
ECC only for
Phase 1; hence, unlawfully
evading
the requirement that co-located projects[74] within
Environmentally Critical Areas (ECAs) must submit a PEIS and/or a PEPRMP.
Petitioner
argues that respondent Province fraudulently classified and misrepresented the
project as a Non-ECP in an ECA, and as a single project instead of a co-located
one. The impact assessment allegedly
performed gives a patently erroneous and wrongly-premised appraisal of the
possible environmental impact of the reclamation project. Petitioner contends that respondent
Provinces choice of classification was designed to avoid a comprehensive
impact assessment of the reclamation project.
Petitioner further
contends that respondent DENR-EMB RVI willfully and deliberately disregarded
its duty to ensure that the environment is protected from harmful developmental
projects because it allegedly performed only a cursory and superficial review
of the documents submitted by the respondent Province for an ECC, failing to
note that all the information and data used by respondent Province in its application for the ECC were
all dated and not current, as data was gathered in the late 1990s for the ECC
issued in 1999 for the first jetty port. Thus, petitioner alleges that respondent
DENR-EMB RVI ignored the environmental impact to Boracay, which involves
changes in the structure of the coastline that could contribute to the changes
in the characteristics of the sand in the beaches of both Caticlan and Boracay.
Petitioner
insists that reclamation of land at the Caticlan side will unavoidably
adversely affect the Boracay side and notes that the declared objective of the
reclamation project is for the exploitation of Boracays tourist trade, since
the project is intended to enhance support services thereto. But, petitioner argues, the primary reason
for Boracays popularity is its white-sand beaches which will be negatively
affected by the project.
Petitioner
alleges that respondent PRA had required respondent Province to obtain the
favorable endorsement of the LGUs of Barangay Caticlan and Malay Municipality
pursuant to the consultation procedures as required by the Local Government
Code.[75] Petitioner asserts that the reclamation
project is in violation not only of laws on EIS but also of the Local
Government Code as respondent Province failed to enter into proper
consultations with the concerned LGUs.
In fact, the Liga ng mga Barangay-Malay
Chapter also expressed strong opposition against the project.[76]
Petitioner
cites Sections 26 and 27 of the Local Government Code, which require
consultations if the project or program may cause pollution, climactic change,
depletion of non-renewable resources, etc. According to petitioner, respondent Province
ignored the LGUs opposition expressed as early as 2008. Not only that, respondent Province belatedly
called for public consultation meetings on June 17 and July 28, 2010, after
an ECC had already been issued and the MOA between respondents PRA and Province
had already been executed. As the petitioner
saw it, these were not consultations but mere project presentations.
Petitioner claims
that respondent Province, aided and abetted by respondents PRA and DENR-EMB,
ignored the spirit and letter of the Revised Procedural Manual, intended to
implement the various regulations governing the Environmental Impact
Assessments (EIAs) to ensure that developmental projects are in line with
sustainable development of natural resources. The project was conceptualized without
considering alternatives.
Further, as to its
allegation that respondent Province failed to perform a full EIA, petitioner
argues that while it is true that as
of now, only the Caticlan side has been issued an ECC, the entire project
involves the Boracay side, which should have been considered a co-located
project. Petitioner claims that any
project involving Boracay requires a full EIA since it is an ECA. Phase 1 of the project will affect Boracay and
Caticlan as they are separated only by a narrow strait; thus, it should be
considered an ECP. Therefore, the ECC
and permit issued must be invalidated and cancelled.
Petitioner
contends that a study shows that the flow of the water through a narrower
channel due to the reclamation project will likely divert sand transport off
the southwest part of Boracay, whereas the characteristic coast of the Caticlan
side of the strait indicate stronger sediment transport.[77] The white-sand beaches of Boracay and its
surrounding marine environment depend upon the natural flow of the adjacent
waters.
Regarding its
claim that the reclamation of land bordering the strait between Caticlan and
Boracay shall adversely affect the frail ecological balance of the area,
petitioner submits that while the study conducted by the MERF-UPMSI only
considers the impact of the reclamation project on the land, it is undeniable
that it will also adversely affect the already frail ecological balance of the
area. The effect of the project would have been
properly assessed if the proper EIA had been performed prior to any
implementation of the project.
According to petitioner,
respondent Provinces intended purposes do not prevail over its duty and
obligation to protect the environment.
Petitioner believes that rehabilitation of the Jetty Port may be done
through other means.
In its Comment[78]
dated June 21, 2011, respondent Province claimed that application for
reclamation of 40 hectares is
advantageous to the Provincial Government considering that its filing fee would
only cost Php20,000.00 plus Value Added Tax (VAT) which is also the minimum fee
as prescribed under Section 4.2 of Administrative Order No. 2007-2.[79]
Respondent
Province considers the instant petition to be premature; thus, it must
necessarily fail for lack of cause of action due to the failure of petitioner
to fully exhaust the available administrative remedies even before seeking
judicial relief. According to respondent
Province, the petition primarily assailed the decision of respondent DENR-EMB
RVI in granting the ECC for the subject project consisting of 2.64 hectares and sought the
cancellation of the ECC for alleged failure of respondent Province to submit
proper documentation as required for its issuance. Hence, the grounds relied upon by petitioner
can be addressed within the confines of administrative processes provided by
law.
Respondent Province believes
that under Section 5.4.3 of DENR Administrative Order No. 2003-30 (DAO 2003-30),[80]
the issuance of an ECC[81]
is an official decision of DENR-EMB RVI on the application of a project
proponent.[82] It cites Section
6 of DENR DAO 2003-30, which provides
for a remedy available to the party aggrieved by the final decision on the
proponents ECC applications.
Respondent
Province argues that the instant petition is anchored on a wrong premise that
results to petitioners unfounded fears and baseless apprehensions. It
is respondent Provinces contention that its 2.64-hectare reclamation project
is considered as a stand alone project, separate and independent from the
approved area of 40 hectares. Thus,
petitioner should have observed the difference between the future development
plan of respondent Province from its actual project being undertaken.[83]
Respondent
Province clearly does not dispute the fact that it revised its original
application to respondent PRA from 2.64 hectares to 40 hectares. However, it claims that such revision is part
of its future plan, and
implementation thereof is still subject to availability of funds, independent
scientific environmental study, separate application of ECC and notice to
proceed to be issued by respondent PRA.[84]
Respondent
Province goes on to claim that [p]etitioners version of the Caticlan jetty
port expansion project is a bigger project which is still at the
conceptualization stage. Although this
project was described in the Notice to
Proceed issued by respondent PRA to have two phases, 36.82 hectares in
Caticlan and 3.18 hectares in Boracay [Island,] it is totally different from
the [ongoing] Caticlan jetty port expansion project.[85]
Respondent
Province says that the Accomplishment Report[86]
of its Engineering Office would attest that the actual project consists of 2.64
hectares only, as originally planned and conceptualized, which was even reduced
to 2.2 hectares due to some construction and design modifications.
Thus,
respondent Province alleges that from its standpoint, its capability to reclaim
is limited to 2.64 hectares only, based on respondent PRAs Evaluation Report[87]
dated October 18, 2010, which was in turn the basis of the issuance of the
Notice to Proceed dated October 19, 2010, because the projects financial
component is P260,000,000.00 only.
Said Evaluation Report indicates that the implementation of the other
phases of the project including site 2, which consists of the other portions of
the 40-hectare area that includes a portion in Boracay, is still within the
10-year period and will depend largely on the availability of funds of
respondent Province.[88]
So, even if
respondent PRA approved an area that would total up to 40 hectares, it was
divided into phases in order to determine the period of its implementation. Each phase was separate and independent
because the source of funds was also separate. The required documents and requirements were
also specific for each phase. The entire
approved area of 40 hectares could be implemented within a period of 10 years
but this would depend solely on the availability of funds.[89]
As far as
respondent Province understands it, additional reclamations not covered by the
ECC, which only approved 2.64 hectares, should undergo another EIA. If respondent Province intends to commence the
construction on the other component of the 40 hectares, then it agrees that it
is mandated to secure a new ECC.[90]
Respondent
Province admits that it dreamt of a 40-hectare project, even if it had
originally planned and was at present only financially equipped and legally
compliant to undertake 2.64 hectares of the project, and only as an expansion
of its old jetty port.[91]
Respondent
Province claims that it has complied with all the necessary requirements for
securing an ECC. On the issue that the
reclamation project is within an ECA requiring the performance of a full or
programmatic EIA, respondent Province reiterates that the idea of expanding the
area to 40 hectares is only a future plan. It only secured an ECC for 2.64 hectares,
based on the limits of its funding and authority. From the beginning, its intention was to
rehabilitate and expand the existing jetty port terminal to accommodate an
increasing projected traffic. The
subject project is specifically classified under DENR DAO 2003-30 on its
Project Grouping Matrix for Determination of EIA Report Type considered as
Minor Reclamation Projects falling under Group II Non ECP in an ECA. Whether 2.64 or 40 hectares in area, the
subject project falls within this classification.
Consequently,
respondent Province claims that petitioner erred in considering the ongoing
reclamation project at Caticlan, Malay, Aklan, as co-located within an ECA.
Respondent
Province, likewise argues that the 2.64-hectare project is not a component of
the approved 40-hectare area as it is originally planned for the expansion site
of the existing Caticlan jetty port. At
present, it has no definite conceptual construction plan of the said portion in
Boracay and it has no financial allocation to initiate any project on the said
Boracay portion.
Furthermore,
respondent Province contends that the present project is located in Caticlan
while the alleged component that falls within an ECA is in Boracay. Considering its geographical location, the two
sites cannot be considered as a contiguous area for the reason that it is
separated by a body of water a strait that traverses between the mainland
Panay wherein Caticlan is located and Boracay. Hence, it is erroneous to consider the two sites
as a co-located project within an ECA.
Being a stand alone project and an expansion of the existing jetty
port, respondent DENR-EMB RVI had required respondent Province to perform an
EPRMP to secure an ECC as sanctioned by Item No. 8(b), page 7 of DENR DAO
2003-30.
Respondent
Province contends that even if, granting for the sake of argument, it had
erroneously categorized its project as Non-ECP in an ECA, this was not a final
determination. Respondent DENR-EMB RVI,
which was the administrator of the EIS system, had the final decision on this
matter. Under DENR DAO 2003-30, an
application for ECC, even for a Category B2 project where an EPRMP is conducted,
shall be subjected to a review process. Respondent DENR-EMB RVI had the
authority to deny said application. Its Regional
Director could either issue an ECC for the project or deny the application. He
may also require a more comprehensive EIA study. The Regional Director issued the ECC based on
the EPRMP submitted by respondent Province and after the same went through the
EIA review process.
Thus,
respondent Province concludes that petitioners allegation of this being a
co-located project is premature if not baseless as the bigger reclamation
project is still on the conceptualization stage. Both respondents PRA and Province are yet to
complete studies and feasibility studies to embark on another project.
Respondent
Province claims that an ocular survey of the reclamation project revealed that
it had worked within the limits of the ECC.[92]
With regard to
petitioners allegation that respondent Province failed to get the favorable
endorsement of the concerned LGUs in violation of the Local Government Code,
respondent Province contends that consultation vis--vis the
favorable endorsement from the concerned
LGUs as contemplated under the Local Government Code are merely tools to seek
advice and not a power clothed upon the LGUs to unilaterally approve or
disapprove any government projects.
Furthermore, such endorsement is not necessary for projects falling
under Category B2 unless required by the DENR-EMB RVI, under Section 5.3 of DENR
DAO 2003-30.
Moreover, DENR Memorandum Circular No. 08-2007 no
longer requires the issuance of permits and certifications as a pre-requisite
for the issuance of an ECC. Respondent
Province claims to have conducted consultative activities with LGUs in
connection with Sections 26 and 27 of the Local Government Code. The vehement and staunch objections of both
the Sangguniang Barangay of Caticlan
and the Sangguniang Bayan of Malay,
according to respondent Province, were not rooted on its perceived impact upon
the people and the community in terms of environmental or ecological balance,
but due to an alleged conflict with their principal position to develop,
utilize and reap benefits from the natural resources found within its
jurisdiction.[93] Respondent Province argues that these
concerns are not within the purview of the Local Government Code. Furthermore, the Preliminary Geohazard
Assessment Report and EPRMP as well as Sangguniang
Panlalawigan Resolution Nos. 2010-022 and 2010-034 should address any
environmental issue they may raise.
Respondent
Province posits that the spirit and intent of Sections 26 and 27 of the Local Government
Code is to create an avenue for parties, the proponent and the LGU concerned,
to come up with a tool in harmonizing its views and concerns about the project.
The duty to consult does not
automatically require adherence to the opinions during the consultation
process. It is allegedly not within the
provisions to give the full authority to the LGU concerned to unilaterally
approve or disapprove the project in the guise of requiring the proponent of
securing its favorable endorsement. In this
case, petitioner is calling a halt to the project without providing an
alternative resolution to harmonize its position and that of respondent
Province.
Respondent
Province claims that the EPRMP[94]
would reveal that:
[T]he
area fronting the project site is practically composed of sand. Dead coral communities
may be found along the vicinity. Thus, fish life at the project site is quite
scarce due to the absence of marine support systems like the sea grass beds and
coral reefs.
x x x
[T]here is no coral cover at the existing Caticlan jetty port. [From] the deepest point of jetty to
the shallowest point, there was no more coral patch and the substrate is sandy.
It is of public knowledge that the said foreshore area is being utilized by the
residents ever since as berthing or anchorage site of their motorized banca.
There will be no possibility of any coral development therein because of its
continuous utilization. Likewise, the
activity of the strait that traverses between the main land Caticlan and
Boracay Island would also be a factor of the coral development. Corals [may]
only be formed within the area if there is scientific human intervention, which
is absent up to the present.
In light of the foregoing premise, it casts serious doubt on
petitioners allegations pertaining to the environmental effects of
Respondent-LGUs 2.64 hectares reclamation project. The alleged environmental impact of the
subject project to the beaches of Boracay Island remains unconfirmed.
Petitioner had unsuccessfully proven that the project would cause imminent,
grave and irreparable injury to the community.[95]
Respondent
Province prayed for the dissolution of the TEPO, claiming that the rules
provide that the TEPO may be dissolved if it appears after hearing that its
issuance or continuance would cause irreparable damage to the party or person
enjoined, while the applicant may be fully compensated for such damages as he
may suffer and subject to the posting of a sufficient bond by the party or
person enjoined. Respondent Province
contends that the TEPO would cause irreparable damage in two aspects:
a.
Financial dislocation
and probable bankruptcy; and
b.
Grave and imminent
danger to safety and health of inhabitants of immediate area, including
tourists and passengers serviced by the jetty port, brought about by the abrupt
cessation of development works.
As regards financial dislocation, the
arguments of respondent Province are summarized below:
1. This
project is financed by bonds which the respondent Province had issued to its
creditors as the financing scheme in funding the present project is by way of
credit financing through bond flotation.
2. The
funds are financed by a Guarantee Bank getting payment from bonds, being sold
to investors, which in turn would be paid by the income that the project would
realize or incur upon its completion.
3. While
the project is under construction, respondent Province is appropriating a
portion of its Internal Revenue Allotment (IRA) budget from the 20% development
fund to defray the interest and principal amortization due to the Guarantee
Bank.
4. The respondent
Provinces IRA, regular income, and/or such other revenues or funds, as may be
permitted by law, are being used as security for the payment of the said loan
used for the projects construction.
5. The inability of
the subject project to earn revenues as projected upon completion will compel
the Province to shoulder the full amount of the obligation, starting from year
2012.
6. Respondent
province is mandated to assign its IRA, regular income and/or such other
revenues or funds as permitted by law; if project is stopped, detriment of the
public welfare and its constituents.[96]
As to the
second ground for the dissolution of the TEPO, respondent Province argues:
1. Non-compliance
with the guidelines of the ECC may result to environmental hazards most
especially that reclaimed land if not properly secured may be eroded into the
sea.
2. The
construction has accomplished 65.26 percent of the project. The embankment that
was deposited on the project has no proper concrete wave protection that might
be washed out in the event that a strong typhoon or big waves may occur
affecting the strait and the properties along the project site. It is already
the rainy season and there is a big possibility of typhoon occurrence.
3. If
said incident occurs, the aggregates of the embankment that had been washed out
might be transferred to the adjoining properties which could affect its natural
environmental state.
4. It
might result to the total alteration of the physical landscape of the area
attributing to environmental disturbance.
5. The lack of proper
concrete wave protection or revetment would cause the total erosion of the
embankment that has been dumped on the accomplished area.[97]
Respondent
Province claims that petitioner will not stand to suffer immediate, grave and
irreparable injury or damage from the ongoing project. The petitioners
perceived fear of environmental destruction brought about by its erroneous
appreciation of available data is unfounded and does not translate into a
matter of extreme urgency. Thus, under
the Rules of Procedure on Environmental Cases, the TEPO may be dissolved.
Respondent PRA filed its Comment[98] on June 22, 2011. It alleges that on June 24, 2006, Executive
Order No. 543 delegated the power to approve reclamation projects to
respondent PRA through its governing Board, subject to compliance with existing
laws and rules and further subject to the condition that reclamation contracts
to be executed with any person or entity (must) go through public bidding.
Section 4 of respondent PRAs Administrative Order No.
2007-2 provides for the approval process and procedures for various reclamation
projects to be undertaken. Respondent
PRA prepared an Evaluation Report on November 5, 2009[99] regarding Aklans
proposal to increase its project to 40 hectares.
Respondent PRA contends that it was only after respondent
Province had complied with the requirements under the law that respondent PRA,
through its Board of Directors, approved the proposed project under its Board Resolution No. 4094.[100] In the same Resolution, respondent PRA Board
authorized the General Manager/CEO to execute a MOA with the Aklan provincial
government to implement the reclamation project under certain conditions.
The issue for respondent PRA was whether or not it approved
the respondent Provinces 2.64-hectare reclamation project proposal in willful
disregard of alleged numerous irregularities as claimed by petitioner.[101]
Respondent PRA claims
that its approval of the Aklan Reclamation Project was in accordance with law
and its rules. Indeed, it issued the notice to proceed only after Aklan had
complied with all the requirements imposed by existing laws and
regulations. It further contends that
the 40 hectares involved in this project remains a plan insofar as respondent
PRA is concerned. What has been approved for reclamation by respondent PRA thus far is
only the 2.64-hectare reclamation project. Respondent PRA reiterates that it approved
this reclamation project after extensively reviewing the legal, technical,
financial, environmental, and operational aspects of the proposed reclamation.[102]
One of the
conditions that respondent PRA Board imposed before approving the Aklan project
was that no reclamation work could be started until respondent PRA has approved
the detailed engineering plans/methodology, design and specifications of the
reclamation. Part of the required
submissions to respondent PRA includes the drainage design as approved by the
Public Works Department and the ECC as issued by the DENR, all of which the
Aklan government must submit to respondent PRA before starting any reclamation
works.[103] Under Article IV(B)(3) of the MOA between
respondent PRA and Aklan, the latter is required to submit, apart from the ECC,
the following requirements for respondent PRAs review and approval, as basis
for the issuance of a Notice to Proceed (NTP) for Reclamation Works:
(a)
Land-form plan with technical
description of the metes and bounds of the same land-form;
(b)
Final master development and land use
plan for the project;
(c)
Detailed engineering studies, detailed
engineering design, plans and specification for reclamation works, reclamation
plans and methodology, plans for the sources of fill materials;
(d)
Drainage plan vis-a-vis the land-form
approved by DPWH Regional Office to include a cost effective and efficient
drainage system as may be required based on the results of the studies;
(e)
Detailed project cost estimates and
quantity take-off per items of work of the rawland reclamation components, e.g.
reclamation containment structures and soil consolidation;
(f)
Organizational chart of the
construction arm, manning table, equipment schedule for the project; and,
(g)
Project timetable (PERT/CPM) for the
entire project construction period.[104]
In
fact, respondent PRA further required respondent Province under Article IV (B)(24)
of the MOA to strictly comply with all conditions of the DENR-EMB-issued ECC and/or comply with pertinent local and
international commitments of the Republic of the Philippines to ensure
environmental protection.[105]
In
its August 11, 2010 letter,[106]
respondent PRA referred for respondent Provinces appropriate action petitioners
Resolution 001, series of 2010 and Resolution 46, series of 2010, of the Sangguniang Bayan of Malay. Governor Marquez wrote respondent PRA[107]
on September 16, 2010 informing it that respondent Province had already met
with the different officials of Malay, furnishing respondent PRA with the
copies of the minutes of such meetings/presentations. Governor Marquez also assured respondent PRA
that it had complied with the consultation requirements as far as Malay was
concerned.
Respondent
PRA claims that in evaluating respondent Provinces project and in issuing the
necessary NTP for Phase 1 of Site 1 (2.64 hectares) of the Caticlan Jetty Port
expansion and modernization, respondent PRA gave considerable weight to all
pertinent issuances, especially the ECC issued by DENR-EMB RVI.[108] Respondent PRA stresses that its earlier
approval of the 40-hectare reclamation project under its Resolution No. 4094,
series of 2010, still requires a second level of compliance requirements from
the proponent. Respondent Province could
not possibly begin its reclamation works since respondent PRA had yet to issue
an NTP in its favor.
Respondent
PRA alleges that prior to the issuance of the NTP to respondent Province for
Phase 1 of Site 1, it required the submission of the following pre-construction
documents:
(a)
Land-Form Plan (with technical description);
(b) Site
Development Plan/Land Use Plan including,
(i) sewer and drainage systems and
(ii) waste water treatment;
(c)
Engineering Studies and Engineering Design;
(d)
Reclamation Methodology;
(e)
Sources of Fill Materials, and,
(f) The
ECC.[109]
Respondent
PRA claims that it was only after the evaluation of the above submissions that
it issued to respondent Province the NTP, limited to the 2.64-hectare
reclamation project. Respondent PRA even
emphasized in its evaluation report that should respondent Province pursue the
other phases of its project, it would still require the submission of an ECC
for each succeeding phases before the start of any reclamation works.[110]
Respondent
PRA, being the national governments arm in regulating and coordinating all
reclamation projects in the Philippines a mandate conferred by law manifests
that it is incumbent upon it, in the exercise of its regulatory functions, to
diligently evaluate, based on its technical competencies, all reclamation
projects submitted to it for approval. Once
the reclamation projects requirements set forth by law and related rules have
been complied with, respondent PRA is mandated to approve the same. Respondent PRA claims, [w]ith all the
foregoing rigorous and detailed requirements submitted and complied with by Aklan,
and the attendant careful and meticulous technical and legal evaluation by
respondent PRA, it cannot be argued that the reclamation permit it issued to
Aklan is founded upon numerous irregularities; as recklessly and baselessly
imputed by BFI.[111]
In
its Comment[112]
dated July 1, 2011, respondent DENR-EMB RVI asserts that its act of issuing the
ECC certifies that the project had undergone the proper EIA process by
assessing, among others, the direct and indirect impact of the project on the
biophysical and human environment and ensuring that these impacts are addressed
by appropriate environmental protection and enhancement measures, pursuant to
Presidential Decree No. 1586, the Revised Procedural Manual for DENR DAO
2003-30, and the existing rules and regulations.[113]
Respondent
DENR-EMB RVI stresses that the declaration in 1978 of several islands, which includes
Boracay as tourist zone and marine reserve under Proclamation No. 1801, has no
relevance to the expansion project of Caticlan Jetty Port and Passenger
Terminal for the very reason that the project is not located in the Island of
Boracay, being located in Barangay Caticlan, Malay, which is not a part of
mainland Panay. It admits that the site
of the subject jetty port falls within the ECA under Proclamation No. 2146
(1981), being within the category of a water body. This was why respondent Province had
faithfully secured an ECC pursuant to the Revised Procedural Manual for DENR
DAO 2003-30 by submitting the necessary documents as contained in the EPRMP on
March 19, 2010, which were the bases in granting ECC No. R6-1003-096-7100
(amended) on April 27, 2010 for the expansion of Caticlan Jetty Port and
Passenger Terminal, covering 2.64 hectares.[114]
Respondent DENR-EMB RVI
claims that the issues raised by the LGUs of Caticlan and Malay had been
considered by the DENR-Provincial Environment and Natural Resources Office
(PENRO), Aklan in the issuance of the Order[115]
dated January 26, 2010, disregarding the claim of the Municipality of Malay,
Aklan of a portion of the foreshore land in Caticlan covered by the application
of the Province of Aklan; and another Order of Rejection dated February 5, 2010
of the two foreshore applications, namely FLA No. 060412-43A and FLA No.
060412-43B, of the Province of Aklan.[116]
Respondent DENR-EMB RVI contends that
the supporting documents attached to the EPRMP for the issuance of an ECC were
merely for the expansion and modernization of the old jetty port in Barangay Caticlan
covering 2.64 hectares, and not the 40-hectare reclamation project in Barangay Caticlan
and Boracay. The previous letter of
respondent Province dated October 14, 2009 addressed to DENR-EMB RVI Regional
Executive Director, would show that the reclamation project will cover
approximately 2.6 hectares.[117] This application for ECC was not officially
accepted due to lack of requirements or documents.
Although petitioner insists that the project
involves 40 hectares in two sites, respondent DENR-EMB RVI looked at the
documents submitted by respondent Province and saw that the subject area
covered by the ECC application and subsequently granted with ECC-R6-1003-096-7100
consists only of 2.64 hectares; hence, respondent DENR-EMB RVI could not
comment on the excess area.[118]
Respondent DENR-EMB RVI admits that as regards the
classification of the 2.64-hectare reclamation project under Non ECP in ECA,
this does not fall within the definition of a co-located project because the
subject project is merely an expansion of the old Caticlan Jetty Port, which
had a previously issued ECC (ECC No. 0699-1012-171 on October 12, 1999). Thus, only an
EPRMP, not a PEIS or PEPRMP, is required.[119]
Respondent
Province submitted to respondent DENR-EMB RVI the following documents contained
in the EPRMP:
a. The
Observations on the Floor Bottom and its Marine Resources at the Proposed Jetty
Ports at Caticlan and Manok-manok, Boracay, Aklan, conducted in 1999 by the
Bureau of Fisheries Aquatic Resources (BFAR) Central Office, particularly in
Caticlan site, and
b. The
Study conducted by Dr. Ricarte S. Javelosa, Ph. D, Mines and Geosciences Bureau
(MGB), Central Office and Engr. Roger Esto, Provincial Planning and Development
Office (PPDO), Aklan in 2009 entitled Preliminary Geo-hazard Assessment for
the Enhancement of the Existing Caticlan Jetty Port Terminal through Beach Zone
Restoration and Protective Marina Development in Malay, Aklan.
Respondent
DENR-EMB RVI claims that the above two scientific studies were enough for it to
arrive at a best professional judgment to issue an amended ECC for the Aklan
Marina Project covering 2.64 hectares.[120] Furthermore, to confirm that the 2.64-hectare
reclamation has no significant negative impact with the surrounding environment
particularly in Boracay, a more recent study was conducted, and respondent
DENR-EMB RVI alleges that [i]t is very important to highlight that the input
data in the [MERF- UPMSI] study utilized the [40-hectare] reclamation and [200-meter]
width seaward using the tidal and wave modelling.[121] The study showed that the reclamation of 2.64
hectares had no effect to the hydrodynamics of the strait between Barangay Caticlan
and Boracay.
Respondent
DENR-EMB RVI affirms that no permits and/or clearances from National Government
Agencies (NGAs) and LGUs are required pursuant to the DENR Memorandum Circular
No. 2007-08, entitled Simplifying the Requirements of ECC or CNC
Applications; that the EPRMP was
evaluated and processed based on the Revised Procedural Manual for DENR DAO
2003-30 which resulted to the issuance of ECC-R6-1003-096-7100; and that the
ECC is not a permit per se but a
planning tool for LGUs to consider in its decision whether or not to issue a local
permit.[122]
Respondent
DENR-EMB RVI concludes that in filing this case, petitioner had bypassed and
deprived the DENR Secretary of the opportunity to review and/or reverse the
decision of his subordinate office, EMB RVI pursuant to the Revised Procedural
Manual for DENR DAO 2003-30. There is no
extreme urgency that necessitates the granting of Mandamus or issuance of TEPO
that put to balance between the life and death of the petitioner or present
grave or irreparable damage to environment.[123]
After receiving
the above Comments from all the respondents, the Court set the case for oral
arguments on September 13, 2011.
Meanwhile, on September 8, 2011,
respondent Province filed a Manifestation
and Motion[124] praying for the
dismissal of the petition, as the province was no longer pursuing the
implementation of the succeeding phases of the project due to its inability to
comply with Article IV B.2(3) of the MOA; hence, the issues and fears expressed
by petitioner had become moot. Respondent Province alleges that the petition
is premised on a serious misappreciation of the real extent of the contested
reclamation project as certainly the ECC covered only a total of 2,691 square
meters located in Barangay Caticlan, Malay, Aklan; and although the MOA spoke
of 40 hectares, respondent Provinces submission of documents to respondent PRA
pertaining to said area was but the first of a two-step process of approval. Respondent Province claims that its failure to
comply with the documentary requirements of respondent PRA within the period
provided, or 120 working days from the effectivity of the MOA, indicated its
waiver to pursue the remainder of the project.[125] Respondent Province further manifested:
Confirming
this in a letter dated 12 August 2011,[126]
Governor Marquez informed respondent PRA that the Province of Aklan is no
longer pursuing the implementation of the succeeding phases of the project
with a total area of 37.4 hectares for our inability to comply with Article IV
B.2 (3) of the MOA; hence, the existing MOA will cover only the project area of
2.64 hectares.
In his reply-letter dated August
22, 2011,[127] [respondent] PRA General Manager informed Governor Marquez that the [respondent]
PRA Board of Directors has given [respondent] PRA the authority to confirm the
position of the Province of Aklan that the Aklan Beach Zone Restoration and
Protection Marine Development Project will now be confined to the reclamation
and development of the 2.64 hectares, more or less.
It is
undisputed from the start that the coverage of the Project is in fact limited
to 2.64 hectares, as evidenced by the NTP issued by respondent PRA. The recent
exchange of correspondence between respondents Province of Aklan and [respondent]
PRA further confirms the intent of the parties all along. Hence, the Project
subject of the petition, without doubt, covers only 2.64 and not 40 hectares as
feared. This completely changes the extent of the Project and, consequently,
moots the issues and fears expressed by the petitioner.[128]
(Emphasis supplied.)
Based on the above contentions,
respondent Province prays that the petition be dismissed as no further
justiciable controversy exists since the feared adverse effect to Boracay
Islands ecology had become academic all together.[129]
The Court heard the parties oral
arguments on September 13, 2011 and gave the latter twenty (20) days thereafter
to file their respective memoranda.
Respondent Province filed another Manifestation and Motion,[130]
which the Court received on April 2, 2012 stating that:
1.
it had submitted the required documents
and studies to respondent DENR-EMB RVI before an ECC was issued in its favor;
2.
it had substantially complied with the
requirements provided under PRA Administrative Order 2007-2, which compliance
caused respondent PRAs Board to approve the reclamation project; and
3.
it had conducted a series of consultative [presentations] relative to
the reclamation project before the LGU of Malay Municipality, the Barangay
Officials of Caticlan, and stakeholders of Boracay Island.
Respondent Province further
manifested that the Barangay Council of
Caticlan, Malay, Aklan enacted on February 13, 2012 Resolution No. 003, series of 2012, entitled Resolution Favorably
Endorsing the 2.6 Hectares Reclamation/MARINA Project of the Aklan Provincial
Government at Caticlan Coastline[131]
and that the Sangguniang Bayan of the Municipality of Malay, Aklan enacted Resolution No. 020, series of 2012,
entitled Resolution Endorsing the 2.6 Hectares Reclamation Project of the
Provincial Government of Aklan Located at Barangay Caticlan, Malay, Aklan.[132]
Respondent Province claims that its
compliance with the requirements of respondents DENR-EMB RVI and PRA that led
to the approval of the reclamation project by the said government agencies, as
well as the recent enactments of the Barangay Council of Caticlan and the Sangguniang Bayan of the Municipality of
Malay favorably endorsing the said project, had categorically addressed all
the issues raised by the Petitioner in its Petition dated June 1, 2011. Respondent Province prays as follows:
WHEREFORE,
premises considered, it is most respectfully prayed of this Honorable Court
that after due proceedings, the following be rendered:
1. The Temporary Environmental
Protection Order (TEPO) it issued on June 7, 2011 be lifted/dissolved.
2. The instant petition be dismissed for being moot and academic.
3. Respondent Province of Aklan
prays for such other reliefs that are just and equitable under the premises.
(Emphases in the original.)
ISSUES
The Court will now resolve the
following issues:
I.
Whether or not the petition should be
dismissed for having been rendered moot and academic
II.
Whether or not the petition is
premature because petitioner failed to exhaust administrative remedies before
filing this case
III.
Whether or not respondent Province
failed to perform a full EIA as required by laws and regulations based on the
scope and classification of the project
IV.
Whether or not respondent Province
complied with all the requirements under the pertinent laws and regulations
V.
Whether or not there was proper,
timely, and sufficient public consultation for the project
DISCUSSION
On the issue of whether or not the
Petition should be dismissed for having been rendered moot and academic
Respondent Province claims in its
Manifestation and Motion filed on April 2, 2012 that with the alleged favorable
endorsement of the reclamation project by the Sangguniang Barangay of Caticlan and the Sangguniang Bayan of the Municipality of Malay, all the issues raised by petitioner had already
been addressed, and this petition should be dismissed for being moot and
academic.
On the contrary, a close reading of
the two LGUs respective resolutions would reveal that they are not sufficient
to render the petition moot and academic, as there are explicit conditions
imposed that must be complied with by respondent Province. In Resolution No. 003, series of 2012, of the Sangguniang Barangay of Caticlan it is stated that any vertical
structures to be constructed shall be subject for barangay endorsement.[133]
Clearly, what the barangay endorsed
was the reclamation only, and not the entire project that includes the
construction of a commercial building and wellness center, and other
tourism-related facilities. Petitioners
objections, as may be recalled, pertain not only to the reclamation per se, but also to the building to be
constructed and the entire projects perceived ill effects to the surrounding
environment.
Resolution No. 020, series of 2012,
of the Sangguniang Bayan of Malay[134]
is even more specific. It reads in part:
WHEREAS, noble it seems the reclamation
project to the effect that it will generate scores of benefits for the Local
Government of Malay in terms of income and employment for its constituents, but
the fact cannot be denied that the
project will take its toll on the environment especially on the nearby fragile
island of Boracay and the fact also remains that the project will eventually
displace the local transportation operators/cooperatives;
WHEREAS, considering the sensitivity of
the project, this Honorable Body through the Committee where this matter was
referred conducted several consultations/committee hearings with concerned
departments and the private sector specifically Boracay Foundation, Inc. and
they are one in its belief that this
Local Government Unit has never been against development so long as compliance
with the law and proper procedures have been observed and that paramount
consideration have been given to the environment lest we disturb the balance of
nature to the end that progress will be brought to naught;
WHEREAS, time and again, to ensure a
healthy intergovernmental relations, this August Body requires no less than
transparency and faithful commitment from the Provincial Government of Aklan in
the process of going through these improvements in the Municipality because it
once fell prey to infidelities in matters of governance;
WHEREAS, as a condition for the grant of this endorsement and to address all
issues and concerns, this Honorable Council necessitates a sincere commitment
from the Provincial Government of Aklan to the end that:
1. To allocate an office space to
LGU-Malay within the building in the reclaimed area;
2. To convene the Cagban and
Caticlan Jetty Port Management Board before the resumption of the reclamation
project;
3. That the reclamation project
shall be limited only to 2.6 hectares in Barangay Caticlan and not beyond;
4. That the local transportation
operators/cooperatives will not be displaced; and
5. The
Provincial Government of Aklan conduct a simultaneous comprehensive study on
the environmental impact of the reclamation project especially during Habagat
and Amihan seasons and put in place as early as possible mitigating measures on
the effect of the project to the environment.
WHEREAS, having presented these
stipulations, failure to comply herewith
will leave this August Body no choice but to revoke this endorsement, hence
faithful compliance of the commitment of the Provincial Government is highly
appealed for[.][135] (Emphases
added.)
The Sangguniang Bayan of Malay obviously imposed explicit conditions
for respondent Province to comply with on pain of revocation of its endorsement
of the project, including the need to conduct a comprehensive study on the
environmental impact of the reclamation project, which is the heart of the
petition before us. Therefore, the
contents of the two resolutions submitted by respondent Province do not support
its conclusion that the subsequent favorable endorsement of the LGUs had already
addressed all the issues raised and rendered the instant petition moot and
academic.
On
the issue of failure to exhaust administrative remedies
Respondents, in essence, argue that
the present petition should be dismissed for petitioners failure to exhaust
administrative remedies and even to observe the hierarchy of courts. Furthermore, as the petition questions the
issuance of the ECC and the NTP, this involves factual and technical
verification, which are more properly within the expertise of the concerned
government agencies.
Respondents
anchor their argument on Section 6, Article II of DENR DAO 2003-30, which
provides:
Any party aggrieved by the final decision on the ECC /
CNC applications may, within 15 days from receipt of such decision, file
an appeal on the following grounds:
a.
Grave abuse of discretion on the part of the deciding
authority, or
b. Serious
errors in the review findings.
The DENR may adopt alternative
conflict/dispute resolution procedures as a means to settle grievances between
proponents and aggrieved parties to avert unnecessary legal action. Frivolous
appeals shall not be countenanced.
The
proponent or any stakeholder
may file an appeal to the following:
Deciding
Authority |
Where to
file the appeal |
EMB Regional Office Director |
Office of the EMB Director |
EMB Central Office Director |
Office of the DENR Secretary |
DENR Secretary |
Office of the President |
(Emphases supplied.)
Respondents argue that since there
is an administrative appeal provided for, then petitioner is duty bound to
observe the same and may not be granted recourse to the regular courts for its
failure to do so.
We do not agree with respondents
appreciation of the applicability of the rule on exhaustion of administrative
remedies in this case. We are reminded
of our ruling in Pagara v. Court of
Appeals,[136] which summarized
our earlier decisions on the procedural requirement of exhaustion of administrative
remedies, to wit:
The
rule regarding exhaustion of administrative remedies is not a hard and fast
rule. It is not applicable (1) where the question in dispute is purely a
legal one, or (2) where the controverted act is patently illegal or was performed
without jurisdiction or in excess of jurisdiction; or (3) where the respondent
is a department secretary, whose acts as an alter ego of the President bear the
implied or assumed approval of the latter, unless actually disapproved by him,
or (4) where there are circumstances
indicating the urgency of judicial intervention, - Gonzales vs. Hechanova,
L-21897, October 22, 1963, 9 SCRA 230; Abaya vs. Villegas, L-25641, December 17, 1966, 18 SCRA; Mitra vs. Subido, L-21691, September 15, 1967, 21 SCRA 127.
Said
principle may also be disregarded when it does not provide a plain, speedy and
adequate remedy, (Cipriano vs. Marcelino,
43 SCRA 291), when there is no due process observed (Villanos vs. Subido, 45 SCRA 299), or where the
protestant has no other recourse (Sta. Maria vs. Lopez, 31 SCRA 637).[137] (Emphases supplied.)
As petitioner correctly pointed
out, the appeal provided for under Section 6 of DENR DAO 2003-30 is only
applicable, based on the first sentence thereof, if the person or entity
charged with the duty to exhaust the administrative remedy of appeal to the
appropriate government agency has been a party or has been made a party in the
proceedings wherein the decision to be appealed was rendered. It has
been established by the facts that petitioner was never made a party to the
proceedings before respondent DENR-EMB RVI. Petitioner was only
informed that the project had already been approved after the ECC was already
granted.[138] Not being a party to the said proceedings, it
does not appear that petitioner was officially furnished a copy of the
decision, from which the 15-day period to appeal should be reckoned, and which
would warrant the application of Section 6, Article II of DENR DAO
2003-30.
Although petitioner was not a party
to the proceedings where the decision to issue an ECC was rendered, it stands
to be aggrieved by the decision,[139]
because it claims that the reclamation of land on the Caticlan side would
unavoidably adversely affect the Boracay side, where petitioners members own
establishments engaged in the tourism trade.
As noted earlier, petitioner contends that the declared objective of the
reclamation project is to exploit Boracays tourism trade because the project
is intended to enhance support services thereto; however, this objective would
not be achieved since the white-sand beaches for which Boracay is famous might
be negatively affected by the project.
Petitioners conclusion is that respondent Province, aided and abetted
by respondents PRA and DENR-EMB RVI, ignored the spirit and letter of our
environmental laws, and should thus be compelled to perform their duties under
said laws.
The new Rules of Procedure for
Environmental Cases, A.M. No. 09-6-8-SC, provides a relief for petitioner under
the writ of continuing mandamus,
which is a special civil action that may be availed of to compel the
performance of an act specifically enjoined by law[140]
and which provides for the issuance of a TEPO as an auxiliary remedy prior to the issuance of
the writ itself.[141]
The Rationale of the said Rules explains the writ in this wise:
Environmental law highlights the shift in the
focal-point from the initiation of regulation by Congress to the implementation
of regulatory programs by the appropriate government agencies.
Thus, a government
agencys inaction, if any, has serious implications on the future of
environmental law enforcement. Private individuals, to the extent that they
seek to change the scope of the regulatory process, will have to rely on such
agencies to take the initial incentives, which may require a judicial
component. Accordingly, questions regarding the propriety of an agencys action
or inaction will need to be analyzed.
This point is emphasized in the availability
of the remedy of the writ of mandamus, which allows for the enforcement
of the conduct of the tasks to which the writ pertains: the performance of a legal duty.[142] (Emphases added.)
The writ of continuing mandamus permits the court to retain jurisdiction after
judgment in order to ensure the successful implementation of the reliefs
mandated under the courts decision and, in order to do this, the court may
compel the submission of compliance reports from the respondent government
agencies as well as avail of other means to monitor compliance with its decision.[143]
According to petitioner, respondent
Province acted pursuant to a MOA with respondent PRA that was conditioned upon,
among others, a properly-secured ECC from respondent DENR-EMB RVI. For this reason, petitioner seeks to compel
respondent Province to comply with certain environmental laws, rules, and
procedures that it claims were either circumvented or ignored. Hence, we find that the petition was appropriately
filed with this Court under Rule 8, Section 1, A.M. No. 09-6-8-SC, which reads:
SECTION 1. Petition
for continuing mandamus.When any agency or instrumentality of the
government or officer thereof unlawfully neglects the performance of an act
which the law specifically enjoins as a duty resulting from an office, trust or
station in connection with the enforcement or violation of an environmental law
rule or regulation or a right therein, or unlawfully excludes another from the
use or enjoyment of such right and there is no other plain, speedy and adequate
remedy in the ordinary course of law, the person aggrieved thereby may file a
verified petition in the proper court, alleging the facts with certainty,
attaching thereto supporting evidence, specifying that the petition concerns an
environmental law, rule or regulation, and praying that judgment be rendered
commanding the respondent to do an act or series of acts until the judgment is
fully satisfied, and to pay damages sustained by the petitioner by reason of
the malicious neglect to perform the duties of the respondent, under the law, rules
or regulations. The petition shall also contain a sworn certification of
non-forum shopping.
SECTION 2. Where to file
the petition.The petition shall be filed with the Regional Trial Court
exercising jurisdiction over the territory where the actionable neglect or
omission occurred or with the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court.
Petitioner had three options where
to file this case under the rule: the Regional Trial Court exercising
jurisdiction over the territory where the actionable neglect or omission
occurred, the Court of Appeals, or this Court.
Petitioner had no other plain,
speedy, or adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law to determine the
questions of unique national and local importance raised here that pertain to
laws and rules for environmental protection, thus it was justified in coming to
this Court.
Having resolved the procedural
issue, we now move to the substantive issues.
On the issues of whether, based
on the scope and classification of the project, a full EIA is required by laws
and regulations, and whether respondent Province complied with all the requirements
under the pertinent laws and regulations
Petitioners arguments on this
issue hinges upon its claim that the reclamation project is misclassified as a
single project when in fact it is co-located. Petitioner also questions the classification
made by respondent Province that the reclamation project is merely an expansion
of the existing jetty port, when the project descriptions embodied in the
different documents filed by respondent Province describe commercial
establishments to be built, among others, to raise revenues for the LGU; thus,
it should have been classified as a new project. Petitioner likewise cries foul to the manner
by which respondent Province allegedly circumvented the documentary
requirements of the DENR-EMB RVI by the act of connecting the reclamation
project with its previous project in 1999 and claiming that the new project is a
mere expansion of the previous one.
As previously discussed, respondent
Province filed a Manifestation and Motion stating that the ECC issued by respondent DENR-EMB RVI covered an
area of 2,691 square meters in Caticlan, and its application for reclamation of
40 hectares with respondent PRA was conditioned on its submission of specific
documents within 120 days. Respondent
Province claims that its failure to comply with said condition indicated its
waiver to pursue the succeeding phases of the reclamation
project and that the subject matter of this case had thus been limited to 2.64
hectares. Respondent PRA, for its part, declared through its General Manager that the Aklan Beach Zone
Restoration and Protection Marine Development Project will now be confined to
the reclamation and development of the 2.64 hectares, more or less.[144]
The Court notes such manifestation
of respondent Province. Assuming, however, that the area involved in the
subject reclamation project has been limited to 2.64 hectares, this case has
not become moot and academic, as alleged by respondents, because the Court
still has to check whether respondents had complied with all applicable
environmental laws, rules, and regulations pertaining to the actual reclamation
project.
We recognize at this point that the
DENR is the government agency vested with delegated powers to review and
evaluate all EIA reports, and to grant or deny ECCs to project proponents.[145] It is the DENR that has the duty to implement
the EIS system. It appears, however,
that respondent DENR-EMB RVIs evaluation of this reclamation project was
problematic, based on the valid questions raised by petitioner.
Being the administrator of the EIS
System, respondent DENR-EMB RVIs submissions bear great weight in this case. However, the following are the issues that put
in question the wisdom of respondent DENR-EMB RVI in issuing the ECC:
1.
Its approval of respondent Provinces
classification of the project as a mere expansion of the existing jetty port in
Caticlan, instead of classifying it as a new
project;
2.
Its classification of the reclamation
project as a single instead of a co-located project;
3.
The lack of prior public consultations and approval of local government
agencies; and
4.
The lack of comprehensive studies
regarding the impact of the reclamation project to the environment.
The
above issues as raised put in question the sufficiency of the evaluation of the
project by respondent DENR-EMB RVI.
Nature
of the project
The first question must be answered
by respondent DENR-EMB RVI as the agency with the expertise and authority to
state whether this is a new project, subject to the more rigorous environmental
impact study requested by petitioner, or it is a mere expansion of the existing
jetty port facility.
The second issue refers to the
classification of the project by respondent Province, approved by respondent
DENR-EMB RVI, as single instead of co-located.
Under the Revised Procedural Manual, the Summary List of Additional Non-Environmentally-Critical Project (NECP)
Types in ECAs Classified under Group II (Table I-2) lists buildings,
storage facilities and other structures as a separate item from transport
terminal facilities. This creates the
question of whether this project should be considered as consisting of more
than one type of activity, and should more properly be classified as
co-located, under the following definition from the same Manual, which reads:
f) Group
IV (Co-located Projects in either ECA or NECA): A
co-located project is a group of single projects, under one or more
proponents/locators, which are located in a contiguous area and managed by one
administrator, who is also the ECC applicant. The co-located project may be an economic
zone or industrial park, or a mix of projects within a catchment, watershed or
river basin, or any other geographical, political or economic unit of
area. Since the location or threshold of
specific projects within the contiguous area will yet be derived from the EIA
process based on the carrying capacity of the project environment, the nature
of the project is called programmatic.
(Emphasis added.)
Respondent DENR-EMB RVI should
conduct a thorough and detailed evaluation of the project to address the
question of whether this could be deemed as a group of single projects
(transport terminal facility, building, etc.)
in a contiguous area managed by respondent Province, or as a single project.
The third item in the above
enumeration will be discussed as a separate issue.
The answer to the fourth question
depends on the final classification of the project under items 1 and 3 above
because the type of EIA study required under the Revised Procedural Manual
depends on such classification.
The
very definition of an EIA points to what was most likely neglected by
respondent Province as project proponent, and what was in turn overlooked by
respondent DENR-EMB RVI, for it is defined as follows:
An
[EIA] is a process that involves predicting
and evaluating the likely impacts of a project (including cumulative impacts)
on the environment during construction, commissioning, operation and
abandonment. It also includes designing appropriate preventive, mitigating and enhancement measures addressing these
consequences to protect the environment and the communitys welfare.[146]
(Emphases supplied.)
Thus, the EIA process must have
been able to predict the likely
impact of the reclamation project to the environment and to prevent any harm that may otherwise be
caused.
The project now before us involves
reclamation of land that is more than
five times the size of the original reclaimed land. Furthermore, the area prior to construction
merely contained a jetty port, whereas the proposed expansion, as described in
the EPRMP submitted by respondent Province to respondent DENR-EMB RVI involves
so much more, and we quote:
The
expansion project will be constructed at the north side of the existing jetty
port and terminal that will have a total area of 2.64 hectares, more or less,
after reclamation. The Phase 1 of the project construction costing around P260
million includes the following:
1.
Reclamation - 3,000 sq m (expansion of jetty port)
2.
Reclamation - 13,500 sq m (buildable area)
3.
Terminal annex building - 250 sq m
4.
2-storey commercial building
2,500 sq m (1,750 sq m of leasable space)
5.
Health and wellness center
6.
Access road - 12 m (wide)
7.
Parking, perimeter fences,
lighting and water treatment sewerage system
8.
Rehabilitation of existing jetty
port and terminal
x x x x
The succeeding phases of the
project will consist of [further] reclamation, completion of the commercial
center building, bay walk commercial strip, staff building, ferry terminal, a
cable car system and wharf marina. This will entail an additional estimated
cost of P785 million bringing the total investment requirement to about P1.0
billion.[147]
(Emphases added.)
As may
be gleaned from the breakdown of the 2.64 hectares as described by respondent
Province above, a significant portion of the reclaimed area would be devoted to
the construction of a commercial building, and the area to be utilized for the
expansion of the jetty port consists of a mere 3,000 square meters (sq.
m). To be true to its definition, the
EIA report submitted by respondent Province should at the very least predict
the impact that the construction of the new buildings on the reclaimed land
would have on the surrounding environment.
These new constructions and their environmental effects were not covered
by the old studies that respondent Province previously submitted for the
construction of the original jetty port in 1999, and which it re-submitted in
its application for ECC in this alleged expansion, instead of conducting
updated and more comprehensive studies.
Any impact on the Boracay side
cannot be totally ignored, as Caticlan and Boracay are separated only by a
narrow strait. This becomes more
imperative because of the significant contributions of Boracays white-sand
beach to the countrys tourism trade, which requires respondent Province to proceed with utmost caution in
implementing projects within its vicinity.
We had occasion to emphasize the
duty of local government units to ensure the quality of the environment under
Presidential Decree No. 1586 in Republic
of the Philippines v. The City of Davao,[148] wherein we held:
Section
15 of Republic Act 7160, otherwise known as the Local Government Code, defines
a local government unit as a body politic and corporate endowed with powers to
be exercised by it in conformity with law.
As such, it performs dual functions, governmental and proprietary.
Governmental functions are those that concern the health, safety and the advancement of the public good or welfare
as affecting the public generally. Proprietary functions are those that seek to
obtain special corporate benefits or earn pecuniary profit and intended for
private advantage and benefit. When exercising governmental powers and
performing governmental duties, an LGU is an agency of the national government.
When engaged in corporate activities, it acts as an agent of the community in
the administration of local affairs.
Found in Section 16 of the Local Government Code is the duty of the LGUs
to promote the peoples right to a balanced ecology.
Pursuant to this, an LGU, like the City of Davao, can not claim exemption from
the coverage of PD 1586. As a body politic endowed with governmental functions,
an LGU has the duty to ensure the quality of the environment, which is the very
same objective of PD 1586.
x x x x
Section
4 of PD 1586 clearly states that no person, partnership or corporation shall
undertake or operate any such declared environmentally critical project or area
without first securing an Environmental Compliance Certificate issued by the
President or his duly authorized representative. The Civil Code defines a
person as either natural or juridical. The
state and its political subdivisions, i.e., the local government units are
juridical persons. Undoubtedly therefore, local government units are not
excluded from the coverage of PD 1586.
Lastly,
very clear in Section 1 of PD 1586 that said law intends to implement the
policy of the state to achieve a balance between socio-economic development and
environmental protection, which are the twin goals of sustainable development.
The above-quoted first paragraph of the Whereas clause stresses that this can only be possible if we adopt a comprehensive
and integrated environmental
protection program where all the sectors of the community are
involved, i.e., the government and the private sectors. The local
government units, as part of the machinery of the government, cannot therefore
be deemed as outside the scope of the EIS system.[149] (Emphases supplied.)
The
Court chooses to remand these matters to
respondent DENR-EMB RVI for it to make a proper study, and if it should find necessary,
to require respondent Province to address these environmental issues raised by
petitioner and submit the correct EIA report as required by the projects
specifications. The Court requires
respondent DENR-EMB RVI to complete its study and submit a report within a non-extendible
period of three months. Respondent
DENR-EMB RVI should establish to the Court in said report why the ECC it issued
for the subject project should not be canceled.
Lack of prior public consultation
The Local Government Code
establishes the duties of national
government agencies in the maintenance of ecological balance, and requires them
to secure prior public consultation and
approval of local government
units for the projects described therein.
In the case before us, the national
agency involved is respondent PRA. Even if the project proponent is the local
government of Aklan, it is respondent PRA which authorized the reclamation,
being the exclusive agency of the government to undertake reclamation
nationwide. Hence, it was necessary for
respondent Province to go through respondent PRA and to execute a MOA, wherein respondent
PRAs authority to reclaim was delegated to respondent Province. Respondent DENR-EMB RVI, regional office of the
DENR, is also a national government institution which is tasked with the
issuance of the ECC that is a prerequisite to projects covered by environmental
laws such as the one at bar.
This project can be classified as a
national project that affects the environmental and ecological balance of local
communities, and is covered by the requirements found in the Local Government
Code provisions that are quoted below:
Section 26. Duty of National Government Agencies in the Maintenance of Ecological
Balance. -
It shall be the duty of every national agency or government-owned or controlled
corporation authorizing or involved in the planning and implementation of any
project or program that may cause pollution, climatic change, depletion of
non-renewable resources, loss of crop land, rangeland, or forest cover, and
extinction of animal or plant species, to consult with the local government
units, nongovernmental organizations, and other sectors concerned and explain
the goals and objectives of the project or program, its impact upon the people
and the community in terms of environmental or ecological balance, and the
measures that will be undertaken to prevent or minimize the adverse effects
thereof.
Section 27. Prior Consultations Required. - No project or program shall be implemented by
government authorities unless the consultations mentioned in Sections 2 (c) and
26 hereof are complied with, and prior approval of the sanggunian concerned is
obtained: Provided, That occupants in areas where such projects are to be
implemented shall not be evicted unless appropriate relocation sites have been
provided, in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution.
In Lina, Jr. v. Pao,[150]
we held that Section 27 of the Local Government Code applies only to national
programs and/or projects which are to be implemented in a particular local
community[151] and
that it should be read in conjunction with Section 26. We held further in this manner:
Thus, the
projects and programs mentioned in Section 27 should be interpreted to mean
projects and programs whose effects are among those enumerated in Section 26
and 27, to wit, those that: (1) may cause pollution; (2) may bring about
climatic change; (3) may cause the depletion of non-renewable resources; (4)
may result in loss of crop land, range-land, or forest cover; (5) may eradicate
certain animal or plant species from the face of the planet; and (6) other
projects or programs that may call for the eviction of a particular group of
people residing in the locality where these will be implemented.
Obviously, none of these effects will be produced by the introduction of lotto
in the province of Laguna.[152] (Emphasis
added.)
During the oral arguments held on
September 13, 2011, it was established that this project as described above falls
under Section 26 because the commercial establishments to be built on phase 1,
as described in the EPRMP quoted above, could cause pollution as it could
generate garbage, sewage, and possible toxic fuel discharge.[153]
Our
ruling in Province of Rizal v. Executive
Secretary[154] is instructive:
We reiterated this doctrine in the recent case of Bangus
Fry Fisherfolk v. Lanzanas, where we held that there was no statutory
requirement for the sangguniang bayan of Puerto Galera to approve the
construction of a mooring facility, as Sections 26 and 27 are inapplicable to
projects which are not environmentally critical.
Moreover, Section 447, which enumerates the powers,
duties and functions of the municipality, grants the sangguniang bayan the
power to, among other things, enact ordinances, approve resolutions and
appropriate funds for the general welfare of the municipality and its
inhabitants pursuant to Section 16 of th(e) Code. These include:
(1) Approving
ordinances and passing resolutions to protect
the environment and impose appropriate penalties for acts which endanger the
environment, such as dynamite fishing and other forms of destructive
fishing, illegal logging and smuggling of logs, smuggling of natural resources
products and of endangered species of flora and fauna, slash and burn farming, and such other activities which result in
pollution, acceleration of eutrophication of rivers and lakes, or of ecological
imbalance; [Section 447 (1)(vi)]
(2)
Prescribing reasonable limits and restraints on the use of property within the
jurisdiction of the municipality, adopting a comprehensive land use plan
for the municipality, reclassifying land within the jurisdiction of the city,
subject to the pertinent provisions of this Code, enacting integrated zoning ordinances in consonance with the
approved comprehensive land use plan, subject to existing laws, rules and
regulations; establishing fire limits or zones, particularly in populous
centers; and regulating the construction, repair or modification of buildings
within said fire limits or zones in accordance with the provisions of this Code;
[Section 447 (2)(vi-ix)]
(3) Approving
ordinances which shall ensure the efficient and effective delivery of the basic
services and facilities as provided for under Section 17 of this Code, and in
addition to said services and facilities, providing for the establishment, maintenance, protection, and
conservation of communal forests and watersheds, tree parks, greenbelts,
mangroves, and other similar forest development projects and, subject
to existing laws, establishing and providing for the maintenance, repair and
operation of an efficient waterworks system to supply water for the inhabitants
and purifying the source of the water
supply; regulating the construction, maintenance, repair and use of
hydrants, pumps, cisterns and reservoirs; protecting the purity and quantity of the water supply of the
municipality and, for this purpose, extending the coverage of appropriate ordinances over all territory
within the drainage area of said water supply and within one hundred (100)
meters of the reservoir, conduit, canal, aqueduct, pumping station, or
watershed used in connection with the water service; and regulating the
consumption, use or wastage of water. [Section 447 (5)(i) & (vii)]
Under
the Local Government Code, therefore, two requisites must be met before a
national project that affects the environmental and ecological balance of local
communities can be implemented: prior consultation with the affected
local communities, and prior approval of the project by the appropriate sanggunian.
Absent either of these mandatory requirements, the projects implementation is
illegal.[155]
(Emphasis added.)
Based
on the above, therefore, prior
consultations and prior approval are
required by law to have been conducted and secured by the respondent Province. Accordingly, the information dissemination
conducted months after the ECC had already been issued was insufficient to
comply with this requirement under the Local Government Code. Had they been conducted properly, the prior
public consultation should have considered the ecological or environmental
concerns of the stakeholders and studied measures alternative to the project, to
avoid or minimize adverse environmental impact or damage. In fact, respondent Province once tried to
obtain the favorable endorsement of the Sangguniang
Bayan of Malay, but this was denied by the latter.
Moreover,
DENR DAO 2003-30 provides:
For
projects under Category A-1, the conduct of public hearing as part of the EIS
review is mandatory unless otherwise determined by EMB. For
all other undertakings, a public hearing is not mandatory unless specifically
required by EMB.
Proponents should initiate public
consultations early in order to ensure that environmentally relevant concerns
of stakeholders are taken into consideration in the EIA study and the
formulation of the management plan.
All public consultations and public hearings conducted during the EIA
process are to be documented. The public hearing/consultation Process report shall be validated by
the EMB/EMB RD and shall constitute part of the records of the EIA process.
(Emphasis supplied.)
In essence, the above-quoted rule shows that in
cases requiring public consultations, the same should be initiated early so that
concerns of stakeholders could be taken into consideration in the EIA
study. In this case, respondent Province
had already filed its ECC application before it met with the local government
units of Malay and Caticlan.
The
claim of respondent DENR-EMB RVI is that no permits and/or clearances from
National Government Agencies (NGAs) and LGUs are required pursuant to the DENR
Memorandum Circular No. 2007-08. However,
we still find that the LGC requirements of consultation and approval apply in
this case. This is because a Memorandum
Circular cannot prevail over the Local Government Code, which is a statute and
which enjoys greater weight under our hierarchy of laws.
Subsequent
to the information campaign of respondent Province, the Municipality of Malay
and the Liga ng mga Barangay-Malay
Chapter still opposed the project. Thus,
when respondent Province commenced the implementation project, it violated
Section 27 of the LGC, which clearly enunciates that [no] project or program shall be implemented by
government authorities unless the consultations mentioned in Sections 2(c) and
26 hereof are complied with, and prior approval of the sanggunian concerned is obtained.
The lack of prior public consultation
and approval is not corrected by the subsequent endorsement of the reclamation
project by the Sangguniang Barangay of
Caticlan on February 13, 2012, and
the Sangguniang Bayan of the
Municipality of Malay on February 28,
2012, which were both undoubtedly achieved at the urging and insistence of
respondent Province. As we have established above, the respective resolutions
issued by the LGUs concerned did not render this petition moot and academic.
It is clear that both petitioner
and respondent Province are interested in the promotion of tourism in Boracay
and the protection of the environment, lest they kill the proverbial hen that
lays the golden egg. At the beginning of
this decision, we mentioned that there are common goals of national
significance that are very apparent from both the petitioners and the
respondents respective pleadings and memoranda.
The parties are evidently in accord
in seeking to uphold the mandate found in Article II, Declaration
of Principles and State Policies, of the 1987 Constitution, which we quote below:
SECTION 16. The State shall protect
and advance the right of the people to a balanced and healthful ecology in
accord with the rhythm and harmony of nature.
x x x x
SECTION 20. The State recognizes
the indispensable role of the private sector, encourages private enterprise,
and provides incentives to needed investments.
The protection of the environment in
accordance with the aforesaid constitutional mandate is the aim, among others, of
Presidential Decree No. 1586, Establishing an Environmental Impact Statement System,
Including Other Environmental Management Related Measures and For Other
Purposes, which declared in its first Section that it is the policy of the State to attain and maintain a rational and orderly
balance between socio-economic growth and environmental protection.
The parties undoubtedly too agree
as to the importance of promoting tourism, pursuant to Section 2 of Republic Act No. 9593, or The
Tourism Act of 2009, which reads:
SECTION 2. Declaration
of Policy. The State declares
tourism as an indispensable element of the national economy and an industry of
national interest and importance, which must be harnessed as an engine of
socioeconomic growth and cultural affirmation to generate investment, foreign
exchange and employment, and to continue to mold an enhanced sense of national
pride for all Filipinos. (Emphasis ours.)
The primordial role of local
government units under the Constitution and the Local Government Code of 1991
in the subject matter of this case is also unquestionable. The Local Government Code of 1991 (Republic
Act No. 7160) pertinently provides:
Section
2. Declaration of Policy. - (a) It is hereby declared the policy of the
State that the territorial and political subdivisions of the State shall enjoy
genuine and meaningful local autonomy to enable them to attain their fullest
development as self-reliant communities and make them more effective partners
in the attainment of national goals. Toward this end, the State shall
provide for a more responsive and accountable local government structure
instituted through a system of decentralization whereby local government units shall be given more powers, authority,
responsibilities, and resources. The process of decentralization shall
proceed from the national government to the local government units.[156]
(Emphases ours.)
As shown by the above provisions of
our laws and rules, the speedy and smooth resolution of these issues would
benefit all the parties. Thus,
respondent Provinces cooperation with respondent DENR-EMB RVI in the
Court-mandated review of the proper classification and environmental impact of
the reclamation project is of utmost importance.
WHEREFORE,
premises considered, the petition is hereby PARTIALLY GRANTED. The
TEPO issued by this Court is hereby converted into a writ of continuing mandamus specifically as follows:
1. Respondent Department of
Environment and Natural Resources-Environmental Management Bureau
Regional Office VI shall revisit and
review the following matters:
a.
its
classification of the reclamation project as a single instead of a co-located
project;
b.
its
approval of respondent Provinces classification of the project as a mere
expansion of the existing jetty port in Caticlan, instead of classifying it as
a new project; and
c.
the
impact of the reclamation project to the environment based on new, updated, and
comprehensive studies, which should forthwith be ordered by respondent DENR-EMB
RVI.
2. Respondent Province of Aklan shall
perform the following:
a.
fully
cooperate with respondent DENR-EMB RVI in its review of the reclamation project
proposal and submit to the latter the appropriate report and study; and
b.
secure
approvals from local government units and hold proper consultations with non-governmental
organizations and other stakeholders and sectors concerned as required by
Section 27 in relation to Section 26 of the Local Government Code.
3. Respondent Philippine
Reclamation Authority shall
closely monitor the submission by respondent Province of the requirements to be
issued by respondent DENR-EMB RVI in connection to the environmental concerns
raised by petitioner, and shall coordinate with respondent Province in
modifying the MOA, if necessary, based on the findings of respondent DENR-EMB
RVI.
4.
The
petitioner Boracay Foundation, Inc. and
the respondents The Province of Aklan,
represented by Governor Carlito S. Marquez, The Philippine Reclamation
Authority, and The DENR-EMB (Region VI) are mandated to submit their respective
reports to this Court regarding their compliance with the requirements set
forth in this Decision no later than three (3) months from the date of
promulgation of this Decision.
5.
In the meantime, the respondents, their
concerned contractor/s, and/or their agents, representatives or persons acting
in their place or stead, shall immediately cease and desist from continuing the
implementation of the project covered by ECC-R6-1003-096-7100 until further
orders from this Court. For this
purpose, the respondents shall report within five (5) days to this Court the
status of the project as of their receipt of this Decision, copy furnished the
petitioner.
This Decision is immediately
executory.
SO ORDERED.
TERESITA J. LEONARDO-DE CASTRO
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
ANTONIO
T. CARPIO
PRESBITERO J. VELASCO, JR.Associate Justice |
ARTURO D. BRION Associate
Justice |
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DIOSDADO M. PERALTA Associate
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LUCAS P. BERSAMIN Associate Justice |
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MARIANO C. DEL CASTILLO Associate Justice
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ROBERTO A. ABAD
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MARTIN S. VILLARAMA, JR. Associate Justice
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JOSE PORTUGAL PEREZ Associate
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JOSE CATRAL
MENDOZA Associate Justice |
MARIA LOURDES
P. A. SERENO Associate Justice
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BIENVENIDO L.
REYES Associate
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ESTELA M. PERLAS-BERNABE Associate
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I
certify that the conclusions in the above Decision had been reached in
consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the
Court.
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ANTONIO
T. CARPIO
Senior Associate Justice
(Per Section 12, R.A. 296, The Judiciary Act of 1948, as amended) |
* On leave.
[1] Rollo, p. 1032.
[2] Id.
at 1032-1033.
[3] Id. at 1114.
[4] Id. at 238-239.
[5] Id.
[6] Id.
at 4.
[7] Excerpt
from http://www.boracayisland.org/aboutboracay.php,
last accessed on January 12, 2012.
[8] Rollo, p. 5.
[9] Id.
at 400.
[10] Id.
at 400-401.
[11] Id.
at 444-467.
[12] Id.
at 401.
[13] Id.
[14] Id.
at 45.
[15] Id.
[16] Id.
at 43-44.
[17] Id.
at 44.
[18] Id.
at 402.
[19] Id.
at 468-525.
[20] Id.
at 402.
[21] Id.
at 528.
[22] Id.
at 403.
[23] Id.
at 529-530.
[24] Id.
at 403.
[25] Id.
at 46-47.
[26] Id.
[27] Id.
at 531-561.
[28] Id.
at 49-140.
[29] Id.
at 48.
[30] Id.
[31] Id.
at 8.
[32] Id.
at 562-567.
[33] Id.
at 404-405.
[34] Id.
at 405.
[35] Id.
at 568-569.
[36] Id.
at 576-577.
[37] Id.
at 406-407.
[38] Id.
at 578-587.
[39] Id.
at 156.
[40] Id.
at 169-174.
[41] Id.
at 594-604.
[42] Id.
at 596.
[43] Id.
at 407-408.
[44] Id.
at 605-609.
[45] Id.
at 610-614.
[46] Id.
at 615-621.
[47] Id. at 622-623.
[48] Id.
at 624-626.
[49] Id. at 627-629.
[50] Id.
at 9-10.
[51] Id.
at 175.
[52] Id.
at 176.
[53] Id.
at 178-182.
[54] Id.
at 183-185.
[55] Id.
at 11.
[56] Id. at 630-631.
[57] Id.
at 155-156.
[58] Id.
at 156.
[59] Id.
at 632-634.
[60] Id.
at 186-202.
[61] Id.
at 409.
[62] Id.
at 635-652.
[63] Id.
at 409-410.
[64] Id.
at 656-658.
[65] Id.
at 660-661.
[66] Id.
at 653-654.
[67] Id.
at 222-223.
[68] Id. at 13.
[69] Id.
at 12.
[70] Id.
[71] The Implementing Rules and
Regulations of Presidential Decree No. 1586, which established The Philippine
Environment Impact Statement System (PEISS).
[72] Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement (PEIS) - documentation of comprehensive studies
on environmental baseline conditions of a contiguous area. It also includes an assessment of the
carrying capacity of the area to absorb impacts from co-located projects such
as those in industrial estates or economic zones (ecozones). (DENR DAO 2003-30,
Section 3[v].)
[73] Rollo, p. 15; Programmatic Environmental Performance Report and Management Plan
(PEPRMP) - documentation of actual cumulative environmental impacts of
co-located projects with proposals for expansion. The PEPRMP should also describe the
effectiveness of current environmental mitigation measures and plans for
performance improvement. (DENR DAO 2003-30, Section 3[w].)
[74] Projects
or series of similar projects or a project subdivided to several phases and/or
stages by the same proponent located in contiguous areas. (DENR DAO 2003-30,
Section 3[b].)
[75] Rollo, pp. 167-168.
[76] Id.
at 25.
[77] Id.
at 30.
[78] Id.
at 396-443.
[79] IRR of E.O. No. 532 dated June 24, 2006, entitled Delegating to the [respondent PRA] the Power to Approve Reclamation Projects.
[80] Implementing
Rules and Regulations for the Philippine Environmental Impact Statement System.
[81] An
ECC shall contain the scope and limitations of the approved activities,
as well as conditions to ensure compliance with the Environmental Management
Plan.
[82] Rollo, pp. 414-415.
[83] Id.
at 418.
[84] Id.
[85] Id.
[86] Id.
at 662-682.
[87] Id.
at 156-165.
[88] Id.
at 419.
[89] Id.
[90] Id.
at 420.
[91] Id.
[92] Id.
at 683-688.
[93] Id.
at 430.
[94] The
EPRMP was based on the study conducted by the Bureau of Fisheries and
Aquatic Resources (BFAR) dated August
27, 1999 (The Observations on the Floor Bottom and its Marine Resources at
the Proposed Jetty Ports at Caticlan and Manok-manok, Boracay, Aklan). (Rollo, pp. 433-434.)
[95] Rollo, pp. 433-434.
[96] Id.
at 436-437.
[97] Id.
at 438.
[98] Id.
at 237-252.
[99] Id. at 285-294.
[100] Id. at 295-296.
[101] Id.
at 243.
[102] Id.
at 243-244.
[103] Id.
at 244.
[104] Id.
at 245.
[105] Id.
Emphasis in the original.
[106] Id.
at 328-329.
[107] Id.
at 330-331.
[108] Id.
at 247.
[109] Id.
[110] Id.
[111] Id.
at 248.
[112] Id.
at 731-746.
[113] Id.
at 732.
[114] Id.
[115] Id.
at 845.
[116] Id.
at 846.
[117] Id.
at 847.
[118] Id.
at 737.
[119] Id.
[120] Id.
at 739.
[121] Id.
at 739-740.
[122] Id.
at 742.
[123] Id.
at 744-745.
[124] Id.
at 999-1004.
[125] Id.
at 999-1001.
[126] Id. at
1008. Attached as Annex 1 is the following letter dated August
12, 2011 from Governor Marquez to Peter Anthony A. Abaya, General Manager and
CEO of respondent PRA:
This
refers to our [MOA] dated May 17, 2010 which, among others, required the
Province of Aklan to submit requirements within [120] days from effectivity of
the said MOA for review and approval by the [respondent] PRA as basis for the
issuance of [NTP] for reclamation works pertaining to the remaining phases of
the project consisting of about 37.4 hectares, more or less.
In
this connection, please be informed that we are no longer pursuing the
implementation of the succeeding phases of the project with a total area of
37.4 hectares for our inability to comply with Article IV B.2 (3) of the MOA;
hence, our existing MOA will cover only the project area of 2.64 hectares.
[127] Id. at
1009. Annex
2: letter from Abaya dated August 22, 2011, quoted below:
Based on our regular monitoring of the
Project, the [respondent] PRA has likewise noted that the Province has not
complied with the requirements for the other phases of the Project within the
period provided under the MOA. Considering that the period within which to
comply with the said provision of the MOA had already lapsed and that you
acknowledged your inability to comply with the same, kindly be informed that
the Aklan Beach Zone Restoration and Protection Marina Development Project will
now be confined to the reclamation and development of the 2.64 hectares, more
or less. Our Board of Directors, in its
meeting of August 18, 2011, has given us authority to confirm your position.
[128] Id.
at 1002-1004.
[129] Id.
at 1004.
[130] Rollo, pp. 1295-1304.
[131] Id. at 1299.
[132] Id. at 1301-1302.
[133] Id. at 1299.
[134] Id. at 1301-1302.
[135] Id.
[136] 325 Phil. 66 (1996).
[137] Id.
at 81.
[138] Rollo, pp. 1058-1059.
[139] Id. at 1056-1057.
[140] Annotation to the Rules of Procedure for
Environmental Cases, p. 45.
[141] Id.
[142] Rationale to the Rules of Procedure for Environmental Cases, p. 76.
[143] Annotation to the Rules of Procedure for
Environmental Cases, p. 45.
[144] Rollo, p. 1009.
[145] Revised Procedural Manual for DAO
2003-30, Sec. 1.9, p. 8.
[146] Id.,
Sec. 1.2, p. 1.
[147] Rollo, pp. 57-58.
[148] 437 Phil. 525 (2002).
[149] Id. at 531-533.
[150] 416
Phil. 438 (2001).
[151] Id.
at 449.
[152] Id.
at 450.
[153] TSN,
September 13, 2011, p. 109. See pp.
109-133.
[154] 513 Phil. 557 (2005).
[155] Id.
at 590-592.
[156] Book I, Title One.