Connect with us

News

San Roque Dam No Longer a Threat as of Friday

Published

on

Dagupan City — The San Roque Dam, the second largest rock-fill dam in Asia, on Friday is no longer a threat to the people downstream of the Agno River in Pangasinan.

Although it is still spilling water downstream, it has so far has scaled down the number of gates that it had opened from five by three meters at 4p.m.Thursday to just one gate by two meters at 6 a.m. today.

This means that the threat of flood along the downstream municipalities of Pangasinan has been eased completely and no longer necessitated the forced evacuation of residents living near the Agno River in 18 towns and one city of Pangasinan as ordered at 3 p.m. Thursday by Gov. Amado I. Espino III.

With just one gate opened by two meters, the elevation of water at the reservoir of San Roque Dam measured at 6 a.m. Friday at 285.01 meters above sea level (masl) or up by 5.01 meters the dam’s high water or spilling level of 280 masl.

Its total outflow of water downstream is 970 cubic meters per second against more than 1,000 cubic meters per second at 4p.m. on Friday when four of its gates were opened by three meters.

The total inflow of water to San Roque Dam was reduced to 337 cms owing to the fact that Ambukao Dam in Bokod, Benguet has already lowered its gate opening from eight to just two by only one meter and Binga Dam down below reduced the number of gates that it has opened from six to three by just 1.5 meter.

This could mean that there is no more rain in the upper Agno River watershed whose fountain head is located at Mt. Data plateau in Mountain Province.

With this development, residents of downstream portions of the Agno River heaved a sigh of relief as the deluge that happened in 2010 at the height of Typhoon “Pepeng” when SM City Rosales in Carmen, Rosales, Pangasinan was almost obliterated by rampaging floodwaters from a washed out dike in Barangay Tumana, Rosales will no longer happen.

However, the San Roque Watch, a movement initiated in Pangasinan at the height of typhoons “Karen” and “Lawin” still continues considering the fact that some areas along the Agno River, especially in Mangatarem, are still under water.

Some areas in Sta. Barbara and Calasiao, though far from the Agno River, are also still under water, a situation they experienced since Typhoon “Karen” blew in.

Class in Dagupan City remain suspended today in 11 towns in Pangasinan which adopted the localized suspension of classes announced by Gov. Amado Espino III. (PNA) FPV/LVM/LVMICUA/RMA

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Comments

Subscribe

Advertisement

Facebook

Advertisement

Ads Blocker Image Powered by Code Help Pro

It looks like you are using an adblocker

Please consider allowing ads on our site. We rely on these ads to help us grow and continue sharing our content.

OK
Powered By
Best Wordpress Adblock Detecting Plugin | CHP Adblock