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MALACAÑANG
Manila
PRESIDENTIAL DECREE No. 1067 December
31, 1976
  A DECREE INSTITUTING A WATER CODE,
THEREBY REVISING AND CONSOLIDATING
THE LAWS GOVERNING THE OWNERSHIP,
APPROPRIATION,                     UTILIZATION,
EXPLOITATION,                  DEVELOPMENT,
CONSERVATION AND PROTECTION OF
WATER RESOURCES
.
WHEREAS, Article XIV, Section 8 of the New
Constitution of the Philippines provides, inter
alia, that all waters of the Philippines belong to
the State;
WHEREAS, existing water legislations are piece-
meal and inadequate to cope with increasing
scarcity of water and changing patterns of water
use;
WHEREAS, there is a need for a Water Code
based on rational concepts or integrated and
multipurpose management of water resources
and sufficiently flexible to adequately meet future
developments;
WHEREAS, water is vital to national
development and it has become increasingly
necessary for government to intervene actively in
improving the management of water resources;
NOW, THEREFORE, I, FERDINAND E.
MARCOS, President of the Philippines, by virtue
of the powers in me vested by the Constitution,
do hereby order and decree the enactment of the
water Code of the Philippines of 1976, as follows:
CHAPTER I
DECLARATION          OF    OBJECTIVES        AND
PRINCIPLES
Article 1. This Code shall be known as The
Water Code of the Philippines.
Article 2. The objectives of this Code are:
(a) To establish the basic principles and
framework relating to the appropriation, control
and conservation of water resources to achieve
the optimum development and rational utilization
of these resources;
(b) To define the extent of the rights and
obligations of water users and owners including
the protection and regulation of such rights;
(c) To adopt a basic law governing the ownership,
appropriation,        utilization,   exploitation,
development, conservation and protection of
water resources and rights to land related
thereto; and
(d) To identify the administrative agencies which
will enforce this Code.
Article 3. The underlying principles of this code
are:
(a) All waters belong to the State.
(b) All waters that belong to the State can not be
the subject to acquisitive prescription.
(c) The State may allow the use or development of
waters by administrative concession.
(d) The utilization, exploitation, development,
conservation and protection of water resources
shall be subject to the control and regulation of
the government through the National Water
Resources Council, hereinafter referred to as the
Council.
(e) Preference in the use and development of
waters shall consider current usages and be
responsive to the changing needs of the country.
Article 4. Waters, as used in this Code, refers to
water under the grounds, water above the
ground, water in the atmosphere and the waters
of the sea within the territorial jurisdiction of the
Philippines.
CHAPTER II
OWNERSHIP OF WATERS
Article 5. The following belong to the State:
(a) Rivers and their natural beds;
(b) Continuous or intermittent waters of springs
and brooks running in their natural beds and the
beds themselves;
(c) Natural lakes and lagoons;
(d) All other categories of surface waters such as
water flowing over lands, water from rainfall
whether natural, or artificial, and water from
agriculture runoff, seepage and drainage;
(e) Atmospheric water;
(f) Subterranean or ground waters; and,
(g) Seawater.
Article 6. The following waters found on private
lands belong to the State:
(a) Continuous or intermittent waters rising on
such lands;
(b) Lakes and lagoons naturally occuring on such
lands;
(c) Rain water falling on such lands;
(d) Subterranean or ground waters; and,
(e) Water in swamps and marshes.
The owner of the land where the water is found
may use the same for domestic purposes without
securing a permit, provided that such use shall be
registered, when required by the Council. The
Council, however, may regulate such when there
is wastage, or in times of emergency.
Article 7. Subject to the provisions of this Code,
any person who captures or collects water by
means of cisterns, tanks, or pools shall have
exclusive control over such water and the right to
dispose of the same.
Article 8. Water legally appropriated shall be
subject to the control of the appropriator from
the moment it reaches the appropriator's canal or
aqueduct leading to the place where the water
will be used or stored and, thereafter, so long as it
is being beneficially used for the purposes for
which it was appropriated.
CHAPTER III
APPROPRIATION OF WATERS
Article 9. Waters may be appropriated and used
in accordance with the provisions of this Code.
Appropriation of water, as used in this Code, is
the acquisition of rights over the use of waters or
the taking or diverting of waters from a natural
source in the manner and for any purpose
allowed by law.
Article 10. Water may be appropriated for the
following purposes:
(a) Domestic
(b) Municipal
(c) Irrigation
(d) Power generation
(e) Fisheries
(f) Livestock raising
(g) Industrial
(h) Recreational, and
(i) Other purposes
Use of water for domestic purposes is the
utilization of water for drinking, washing,
bathing, cooking or other household needs, home
gardens, and watering of lawns or domestic
animals.
Use of water for municipal purposes is the
utilization of water for supplying the water
requirements of the community.
Use of water for irrigation is the utilization of
water for producing agricultural crops.
Use of water for power generation is the
utilization of water for producing electrical or
mechanical power.
Use of water for fisheries is the utilization of
water for the propagation and culture of fish as a
commercial enterprise.
Use of water for livestock raising is the utilization
of water for large herds or flocks of animals
raised as a commercial enterprise.
Use of water for industrial purposes is the
utilization of water in factories, industrial plants
and mines, including the use of water as an
ingredient of a finished product.
Use of water for recreational purposes is the
utilization of water for swimming pools, bath
houses, boating, water skiing, golf courses and
other similar facilities in resorts and other places
of recreation.
Article 11. The State, for reasons of public policy,
may declare waters not previously appropriated,
in whole or in part, exempt from appropriation
for any or all purposes and, thereupon, such
waters may not be appropriated for those
purposes.
Article 12. Waters appropriated for a particular
purpose may be applied for another purpose only
upon prior approval of the Council and on
condition that the new use does not unduly
prejudice the rights of other permittees, or
require an increase in the volume of water.
Article 13. Except as otherwise herein provided,
no       person,      including      government
instrumentalities or government-owned or
controlled corporations, shall appropriate water
without a water right, which shall be evidenced
by a document known as a water permit.
Water right is the privilege granted by the
government to appropriate and use water.
Article 14. Subject to the provisions of this Code
concerning the control, protection, conservation,
and regulation of the appropriation and use of
waters, any person may appropriate or use
natural bodies of water without securing a water
permit for any of the following:
(a) Appropriation of water by          means    of
handcarried receptacles; and
(b) Bathing or washing, watering or dipping of
domestic or farm animals, and navigation of
watercrafts or transportation of logs and other
objects by flotation.
Article 15. Only citizens of the Philippines, of
legal age, as well as juridical persons, who are
duly qualified by law to exploit and develop water
resources, may apply for water permits.
Article 16. Any person who desires to obtain a
water permit shall file an application with the
Council who shall make known said application
to the public for any protests.
In determining whether to grant or deny an
application, the Council shall consider the
following: protests filed, if any; prior permits
granted; the availability of water; the water
supply needed for beneficial use; possible adverse
effects; land-use economics; and other relevant
factors.
Upon approval of an application, a water permit
shall be issued and recorded.
Article 17. The right to the use of water is
deemed acquired as of the date of filing of the
application for a water permit in case of
approved permits, or as of the date of actual use
in a case where no permit is required.
Article 18. All water permits granted shall be
subject to conditions of beneficial use, adequate
standards of design and construction, and such
other terms and conditions as may be imposed by the
Council.
Such permits shall specify the maximum amount
of water which may be diverted or withdrawn,
the maximum rate of diversion or withdrawal,
the time or times during the year when water
may be diverted or withdrawn, the points or
points of diversion or location of wells, the place
of use, the purposes of which water may be used
and such other requirements the Council deems
desirable.
Article 19. Water rights may be leaded or
transferred in whole or in part to another person
with prior approval of the Council, after due
notice and hearing.
Article 20. The   measure       and     limit   of
appropriation of water shall be beneficial use.
Beneficial use of water is the utilization of water
in the right amount during the period that the
water is needed for producing the benefits for
which the water is appropriated.
Article 21. Standards of beneficial use shall be
prescribed by the council for the appropriator of
water for different purposes and conditions, and
the use of waters which are appropriated shall be
measured and controlled in accordance
therewith.
Excepting for domestic use, every appropriator of
water shall maintain water control and
measuring devices, and keep records of water
withdrawal. When required by the Council, all
appropriators of water shall furnish information
on water use.
Article 22. Between two or more appropriators of
water from the same sources of supply, priority in
time of appropriation shall give the better right,
except that in times of emergency the use of water
for domestic and municipal purposes shall have a
better right over all other uses; Provided, the
where water shortage is recurrent and the
appropriator for municipal use has a lower
priority in time of appropriation, then it shall be
his duty to find an alternative source of supply in
accordance with
conditions prescribed by the Council.
Article 23. Priorities may be altered on grounds
of greater beneficial use, multi-purpose use, and
other similar grounds after due notice and
hearing, subject to payment of compensation is
proper cases.
Article 24. A water right shall be exercised in
such a manner that the rights of third persons or
of other appropriators are not prejudiced
thereby.
Article 25. A holder of water permit may demand
the establishment of easements necessary for the
construction and maintenance of the works and
facilities needed for the beneficial use of the
waters to be appropriated subject to the
requirements of just compensation and to the
following conditions:
(a) That he is the owner, lessee, mortgagee or one
having real right over the land upon which he
proposes to use water; and
(b) That the proposed easement is the most
convenient and the least onerous to the servient
estate.
R of waters may be modified by agreement of the
contracting parties provided the same is
notcontrary to law or prejudicial to third
persons.