The message is ominous: With water running out and sources drying up or vanishing, it was high time we worked overtime to conserve our water resources and the much-abused ecosystem ingeneral.
Like many other natural resources that abound in this country, we have taken water a free gift of God for granted.
Wanton waste of water and the degradation of its sources has continued unabated that some of us in this battered country might end up fighting among ourselves over the precious liquid even before a world war erupts over water.
Or, like oil and petroleum products, water might become so scarce and expensive that it could trigger social turmoil, economic dislocation and health disasters.
For instance, in the crowded Las Pinas-Parañaque area south of Manila, many deep-wells dug decades ago have either dried up or have had sea water seeping into the aquifers eliminating the wells as reliable sources of clean, safe water.
The widely accepted explanation is that the massive pumping out of water through the deep-wells has accelerated sharply with the rise in household and commercial demand. The aquifers are thus no longer able to replenish themselves fast enough.
In the case of wells that have been turning up either dirty or salty water, the theory is that with the depletion of their supply, saline water from the nearby bay has started to fill the developing vacuum.
An alarming consequence of this is that Metro Manila has been found to be sinking 10 times faster than during the period before the 1960s. That is because the underground rivers flowing under the metropolis have been drying up, leaving huge subterranean hollow space.
While I mentioned only two areas south of Manila, actually the over-extraction of water and the resulting sinking have been observed in varying degrees over a wider area that includes Guiguinto, Bocaue, Marilao, Meycauayan, Caloocan, Navotas, Quezon City, Makati, Mandaluyong, Pasig, Pateros, Pasay, Muntinlupa, Dasmariñas, and many areas in the Marikina Valley fault zone.
The village water systems, alas, have become so unreliable with faucets running dry for days because of breakdowns traced to negligence and mismanagement.
The haulers enjoy brisk business delivering water as long as the regular piped-in supply is unavailable. This has given rise to suspicion that some waterworks executives might be in cahoots with the water haulers, a charge they deny.
Some households have in stock two sets of supply one for general use consisting of raw water delivered by the haulers, and another set bought from water-purifying stations used for drinking and cooking. Taking a shower has gone out of fashion in many areas.
The big question in these villages is: If the situation is already beyond the ken of the local waterworks company, how come a more reliable firm (any of the two outfits that have sprung from the Manila Waterworks and Sewerage System) is not made to take over?
Statistics have shown that even the production (extraction and refining) of oil, also cited by Reyes as another fuse for other wars, has been dwindling in relation to the actual amount of oil used worldwide.
This, plus the observation that the production in an oil field starts to decline when half of its measured potential has been extracted, has led many researchers to conclude that the "peak oil" (the production point at which output starts to drop) would come before 2010!
Input some error and you can conclude that the output from the worlds conventional or known oilfields will start to drop within 10 years.
It is possible that such Peak Oil might rear its ugly head toward the end of President Gloria Arroyos term. Is she ready for it?
To clarify: The peak or the start of the production decline does not mean the worlds oil has run out. It simply means that the output of the wells, with half of their reserves still intact, will start slowing down at that point.
During the Marcos regime, there was a far-sighted energy program with reasonable annual targets for gradually reducing the countrys dependence on oil partly by cutting usage as well as tapping and developing other sources of energy.
Before the Marcos regime fell, the countrys dependence on oil had dropped to less than 50 percent, if memory serves. But the EDSA revolt swept away not only the dictator but also his energy program.
Now we are back to a high dependence on imported crude and oil products, and the continued neglect of research and installation of alternative systems for generating energy.
The system we have looks like a nationwide grid connecting various power plants of varying grades and age using crude oil, coal and other petroleum-derived fuel.
Mainly, we seem to improvise from one power crisis to another, with one eye focused on politics and some business on the side.
Facing such a dire situation, one reflex reaction is to look for ways to reduce drastically the use of oil and petroleum-based fuels and products.
That is why we have motor vehicles that have been retooled to use diesel mixed with coconut oil, or some engines that run on natural gas extracted from the Malampaya sea off Palawan. That is a logical move that adds to our savings on our oil bill.
Research and development should also focus not only on fuel but also on the engines and machines themselves. The Philippines is not in the big league, but other nations such as Japan, the United States and some European countries can break away from the straitjacket of the engine run on gasoline and other oil-based products.
Aside from retooling existing engines, they can also totally rethink the design of auto engines, as well as motors and machinery for other industries, so they can use other fuels found in great abundance.
Let us not change only the fuel, but the engine itself.