Prices in Negros Oriental not affected by Kanlaon eruption

By Mary Judaline Partlow

June 10, 2024, 8:46 pm

<p><strong>DISTRIBUTION.</strong> Residents of Canlaon City, Negros Oriental line up at a portable/mobile water filtration system to access safe drinking water in this undated photo. Following the June 3, 2024 eruption of Mt. Kanlaon, water sources in the mountain city may have been compromised by the presence of hazardous sulfur dioxide. <em>(Photo courtesy of Salta Canlaon Official Facebook) </em></p>

DISTRIBUTION. Residents of Canlaon City, Negros Oriental line up at a portable/mobile water filtration system to access safe drinking water in this undated photo. Following the June 3, 2024 eruption of Mt. Kanlaon, water sources in the mountain city may have been compromised by the presence of hazardous sulfur dioxide. (Photo courtesy of Salta Canlaon Official Facebook) 

DUMAGUETE CITY – There is no monitored rise in the prices of basic and prime commodities in Canlaon City following the eruption of Mt. Kanlaon on June 3, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) in Negros Oriental said Monday.

There is also enough supply of commodities in the mountain city, DTI-Negros Oriental provincial director Nimfa Virtucio assured in an interview with the Philippine News Agency.

She added, however, that the supply of safe and potable drinking water needs to be addressed.

“Although not critical, we want to ensure that there will be enough potable water in Canlaon City as its ground sources are compromised by sulfur dioxide emitted by the volcano during the eruption to date,” Virtucio said.

Canlaon Mayor Jose Chubasco Cardenas assured the DTI that the local government has a portable water filtration that goes around the city to ensure the needs of residents are met.

Also, there are refilling stations in the lowland towns that deliver regularly to customers in the mountain city, Virtucio added.

A price freeze was ordered in Canlaon after the city government declared a state of calamity the day after the eruption.

The provincial government already declared a state of calamity in April for 60 days due to the effects of the El Niño phenomenon. (PNA)

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