DPWH gets DOJ nod to adopt green building regulation

Coral City in Sto Tomas Batangas

 

MANILA, Philippines – Following the destruction caused by typhoon Yolanda, the Department of Justice (DOJ) allowed the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) to push through with its plan of adopting a green building regulation in the National Building Code of the Philippines (NBCP).

In a nine-page legal opinion made public Wednesday, Justice Secretary Leila De Lima said the DPWH has the authority to issue implementing rules and regulations for effective implementation of the NBCP.

With such power, De Lima said the authority includes the power to amend or revise under the doctrine of necessary implications.

Section 203 of both the NBCP and its IRR explicitly authorizes changes and/or amendments to existing referral codes.

“Indeed, the provisions of the referral codes should be allowed to evolve to respond to the needs of the changing times,” De Lima said in her legal opinion.

“Verily, amending all the pertinent provisions of existing referral codes to include the green building regulation may be considered as one of the needed changes envisioned at the time of the adoption of the law,” she said.

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– Tetch Tores-Tupas

Featured on Inquirer, 27 November 2013

PH envoy at climate meet urges immediate action

Philippine delegate Yeb Sano received a standing ovation after delivering a passionate address to the United Nations climate conference in Warsaw on Monday.

“Today I say we care. We can fix this. We can stop this madness right now, right here in the middle of this football field and start moving the goal posts. Mr President, your excellencies, honourable ministers. My delegation calls on you respectfully to lead us and let Poland and Warsaw be remembered forever as the place were we truly cared to stop this madness,” he said.

Delegates gave him a standing ovation as Sano wiped away his tears.

In the Philippine town of Tacloban, dazed survivors begged for help and scavenged for food, water and medicine, as relief workers struggled to reach victims of super typhoon Haiyan that killed an estimated 10,000 people in the central Philippines.

As President Benigno Aquino deployed hundreds of soldiers in the coastal city of Tacloban to quell looting, the huge scale of death and destruction become clearer as reports emerged of thousands of people missing and images showed apocalyptic scenes in one town that has not been reached by rescue workers.

“My country is just reeling from another category five typhoon and what we are counting are the dead, they are being buried, washed away by this abomination that is not our doing. so what more can we ask from this conference but to move those talks and those commitments into action. We are ready to engage. We are ready. All our systems are now ready to take on the resiliency path but we need all your commitments and therefore I ask our world leaders to deliver something in Warsaw. To deliver action and not just commitments and words,” another member of the Philippine delegation, Alicia Ilaga, told a news conference.

Tasneem Essop from the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) said the disaster in the Philippines was a wake-up call.

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