SEN.
MARCOS LAUDS DPWH
FOR LAUNCHING GREEN BUILDING CODE
In line with his pro-environment advocacy,
Senator Ferdinand “Bongbong” R. Marcos, Jr. lauded the Department of Public
Works and Highways (DPWH) for launching the Philippine Green Building Code (PGBC)
today.
The code is a set of rules governing
building construction based on the best environment-friendly building methods
and practices compiled by the DPWH, working in partnership with the private
sector and local government units.
At the launching ceremony, Marcos,
Chairman of the Public Works Committee, hailed the code as a “very important
part of our national contribution to the world’s climate change mitigation
strategies.” He also acknowledged the contributions of all stakeholders in
crafting the code.
“We hail this as a triumph of a mutual
collaboration between government and the private sector,” said Marcos. “The
result is a practical — and hopefully, equally effective — means of achieving a
desirable and workable green building framework for initial implementation in
the entire country, especially when we think of the rather long and tedious
alternative: the process of law-making in Congress,” he added.
Marcos has been pushing for the adoption
of rules for more environment-friendly buildings. He has filed Senate Bill 410,
seeking to establish a National Green Building Code.
Unlike a law that needs congressional
action to change, the PGBC is subject to the DPWH Secretary’s periodic review.
The code applies to all new construction
or alterations of buildings with the following required minimum Total Gross
Floor Areas: Residential dwellings measuring 20,000 square meters (sqm.);
school, office, mixed occupancy buildings measuring 10,000 sqm., and malls
measuring 15,000 sqm.
The code prescribes minimum requirements
on energy efficiency, material sustainability, solid waste management, site
sustainability, and indoor environmental quality.
Marcos advised the DPWH to remain
strong-willed and brace for the “birth pains” that would surely accompany the
implementation of the code.
Nevertheless, he expressed confidence that
the public will soon realize the importance of green building practices in
safeguarding the environment and its role in sustained economic development.
Marcos said the DPWH should put more
emphasis on the enforcement of the code.
Likewise, Marcos said the DPWH could
suggest to Congress the needed adjustments to laws to ensure that the
Philippine Green Building Code “would evolve into a more effective and workable
mechanism.”
“Through the help of its champions of the
environment, Congress will be able to respond in a timely manner—and hopefully,
with a sense of urgency, as these efforts will all ultimately impact our
continued survival as a people and as a nation,” Marcos said. /MP
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