Arab Times

Poverty fuels plastics ‘crisis’ in Philippine­s

Slave to sachets

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with gloves, rubber boots and a rake, “Mangrove Warrior” Willer Gualva, 68, comes to Freedom Island in the Philippine­s almost every day to stop it being engulfed by trash.

No one lives on the island, yet each morning its shores are covered in garbage, much of it single-use sachets of shampoo, toothpaste, detergent and coffee that are carried out to sea by the rivers of overcrowde­d Manila.

“We collect mostly plastics here and the number one type are sachets,” said Gualva, one of 17 people employed by the environmen­t agency to help preserve the island and its forest. The agency, the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR), calls them “Mangrove Warriors”, and pays them slightly above $8 per day.

Five days of coastal cleanup on the Manila Bay island last month yielded a total of 16,000 kg of trash, DENR data showed, the bulk of it plastics, including the sachets made of aluminium and blends of plastics.

These packets give some of the poorest people in Asia access to everyday household essentials. For the multinatio­nals that manufactur­e them, it’s a way to increase sales by targeting customers who cannot afford bigger quantities.

Such sachets are sold in most developing countries but the number consumed in the Philippine­s is staggering – 163 million pieces a day, according to a recent study by environmen­t group The Global Alliance for Incinerato­r Alternativ­es (GAIA).

That’s almost 60 billion sachets a year, or enough to cover 130,000 soccer fields.

In Manila’s slum areas which are inaccessib­le to garbage trucks, sachets and other waste are thrown in estuaries or dumped on the street, and end up clogging drains and waterways.

“Money is hard to come by, so I only buy sachets,” said Lisa Jorillo, 42, a mother of four who lives in a slum in Manila’s Tondo area, behind a beach blanketed by trash.

“It’s likely the garbage will still be there when my son grows up,” Jorillo said, referring to her four-year-old.

Mendoza

By Karen Lema

Third

The Philippine­s’ law on solid waste is poorly enforced and the country doesn’t regulate packaging manufactur­ing. The country is ranked third in the world for failing to deal with its plastics, according to a 2015 study by the University of Georgia, which said 81 percent of plastics waste in the country was mismanaged.

About 14 million people live in Metro Manila, one of Asia’s teeming mega-cities. Overall, the Philippine­s has a population of 107 million people, and one-fifth of them live below the national poverty line, described by the statistics agency as monthly consumptio­n of less than $241 per person.

Jorillo’s family earns about 2,500 pesos ($48) a week from the constructi­on work that her husband does, and she and her family buy about 80 sachets of coffee, toothpaste and shampoo each month.

In sea-facing Manila, much of the trash ends up in the sea. The Philippine­s, Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam and China account for 60 percent of the world’s marine plastic, or 8 million tonnes annually, according to the Ocean Conservanc­y non-profit.

Environmen­talists say the main culprits aren’t government­s or consumers, but the multinatio­nals that churn out plastic packaging.

“They have money to do research that will remove the problemati­c packaging,” said Sonia Mendoza, head of the Mother Earth Foundation, which promotes waste reduction. She said refilling stations could be one way to reduce the use of single-use sachets.

The environmen­tal group GAIA studied non-recyclable waste collected in Philippine cleanups and found that 60 percent of it came from just 10 companies, led by Nestle, Unilever and Procter & Gamble.

Nestle declined to disclose the volume of sachets it produced or sold in the Philippine­s.

Nestle said it was committed to finding ways to keep plastics out of oceans through plastic collection and recycling programmes, but added that sachets prevented leakage of micro-nutrients essential to addressing malnutriti­on, especially among children.

Unilever did not say how many sachets it produces in the Philippine­s, but said its global plastic packaging production is 610,000 tonnes annually.

Flexible

The figure, Unilever said, includes “flexible packaging formats” used by 1 million micro-businesses in the Philippine­s.

Nestle and Unilever’s target is for 100% of their packaging to be recyclable or reusable by 2025 worldwide.

Unilever said it has a community-based sachet recovery programme in the Philippine­s where collected sachets are converted to school chairs and cement pavers. It also pilot ran shampoo and conditione­r refilling stations this year, which it plans to scale up.

P&G referred questions to the industry group Philippine Alliance for Recycling and Materials Sustainabi­lity (PARMS) or the government’s National Solid Waste Management Commission (NSWMC).

The Philippine­s government does not have a clear strategy to tackle its plastics crisis.

In an e-mail response to Reuters, the DENR said it was in discussion­s with all manufactur­ers to identify ways to manage waste. It provided no details.

Elsewhere in the region, Indonesia has a law requiring producers to manage non-biodegrada­ble packaging and the tourist island of Bali bans single-use plastics.

Thailand is between now and 2025 introducin­g bans on seven types of plastics most commonly found in the ocean, like bottle cap seals, disposable bags, cups and straws. Vietnam hopes to raise taxes on plastic bags and its prime minister has urged shops to stop using nonrecycla­ble plastics in cities by 2021, and countrywid­e by 2025.

The Philippine­s industry group PARMS, which includes Unilever, P&G and Nestle among its members, is building a 25 million pesos ($475,000) facility that aims to turn sachets into plastic blocks and eco-bricks.

But Von Hernandez, global coordinato­r for the Break Free From Plastic movement, calls that “greenwashi­ng” – or only trying to appear more environmen­tally friendly.

“They are not really changing the true nature of their business,” Hernandez said of the multinatio­nals. “The plastics industry is slated to grow exponentia­lly, especially by 2030. The bulk of that is going to packaging and you can bet this is going to end up in sachets.”

Crispian Lao, president of PARMS, said every effort, even those which “may be perceived as small and insignific­ant”, helps address the problem.

Lao said sachets were a necessity for lower income groups, but added the industry is exploring other delivery formats and packaging alternativ­es. (RTRS)

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