Drowned roads, rising fuel, and the price we pay on NewsLine Philippines - Building Information Highway for the Community
DAVAO CITY (March 30) — Across Mindanao today, the effects of conflict among global powers are being felt.
Not in distant headlines, but on flooded streets, stalled engines, and empty wallets.
When roads disappear under water, transport slows. When transport slows, goods are delayed. When goods are delayed, prices rise. And when fuel prices surge on top of all this, the burden becomes unbearable.
In cities like Davao City, flooding is no longer an occasional disruption—it is a recurring reality. Some say it is the cost of development; others believe it is the price of climate change. Either way, everyone suffers.
Each heavy downpour brings:
- Impassable roads
- Longer travel times
- Higher fuel consumption
For drivers, this is not just an inconvenience—it is lost income.
A jeepney that once made multiple trips now burns more fuel navigating flooded routes—if it can operate at all.
Transport Sector: Absorbing the Blow Alone
Leo, a 52-year-old jeepney driver, said:
“Fuel prices are rising weekly, and road conditions are worsening due to flooding. We need to increase fares, but we lose passengers. If we keep fares low, we absorb the losses.”
Either way, they lose.
And commuters? They pay more for slower, less reliable rides.
Rising Costs from Farm to Market
Flooding does not just affect roads—it disrupts supply chains.
Vegetables from upland farms struggle to reach markets. Fish deliveries arrive late or spoiled. Transport costs rise, and these are passed on to consumers.
In public markets across Mindanao:
Prices continue to climb
Supply becomes unpredictable
What used to be affordable is now negotiable. What used to be enough is now lacking.
A Crisis of Systems, Not Just Weather
This is not just about heavy rain. This is not just about global oil prices.
This is about a system where:
Infrastructure fails under predictable weather
Fuel prices are fully exposed to global shocks
There is little buffer for those at the bottom
Compare this to countries like Malaysia and Brunei, where governments absorb fuel shocks to protect their citizens.
Here, the burden is transferred—directly and immediately—to the public.
Who Suffers First—and Most
The hardest hit are always the same:
The driver who earns less each day
The vendor who sells less but pays more
The family was forced to cut meals to survive
Flooding takes away mobility. Fuel hikes take away affordability.
Together, they take away stability.
The Cost of Being Unprotected
Every flood exposes weak infrastructure.
Every fuel hike exposes weak protection.
And together, they reveal something deeper: a lack of insulation for ordinary Filipinos against predictable crises.
The Bottom Line
In Mindanao, the crisis is no longer a series of separate events. Flooding, fuel prices, and rising costs have merged into one reality.
While other nations cushion the blow, Filipinos wade through it—literally and economically.
And unless something changes, the story will remain the same:
When the roads flood, and fuel rises, it is the people who sink.
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Drowned roads, rising fuel, and the price we pay
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