BusinessMirror

Consumers file raps vs 6 firms

- BY JONATHAN L. MAYUGA @jonlmayuga

SIX companies, including cocacola philippine­s, are facing charges before the Department of Trade and industry (DTI) for allegedly using dangerous plastic packaging and for their “false” recyclable plastic advertisem­ents.

This after the DTI recently handed down certificat­es to File Action against the respondent­s in the landmark complaint filed by 32 concerned Filipino consumers last november, paving the way for the adjudicati­on or the legal process in which an arbiter—in this case, the Dti—reviews evidence and arguments of opposing parties.

Aside from coca-cola, the other companies named respondent­s to the consumer complaints are pepsi-cola, nestle, Unilever, colgate palmolive, and Universal Robina corp. (URC).

The complainan­ts include fishermen residing in Malabon, navotas, parañaque, and cavite, and members of civil society organizati­ons and environmen­tal advocacy groups.

Lauding the DTI for its prompt action that will allow their legitimate complaints against the manufactur­ing firms to be justly heard, the complainan­ts are confident in pursuing what they describe as a strong case that will hold the respondent­s accountabl­e.

After a successful DTI mediation, the complainan­ts and one of the companies—procter and Gamble—have agreed to continue the dialogue with the hope of reaching an amicable settlement.

“We welcome with guarded optimism the move of procter and Gamble to sit down and talk to address this legitimate consumer complaint. As for the other companies, the complaint against them for their false recyclable plastic advertisem­ent is strong and we are confident that the agency mandated to protect consumer rights will be on our side,” pablo Rosales, one of the complainan­ts said in a statement.

on november 15, 2022, accompanie­d by their lawyers, the complainan­ts in the case trooped to the DTI in Makati city and filed the complaint before the Fair Trade enforcemen­t Bureau-mediation and Adjudicati­on Bureau against coca-cola, pepsicola, nestle, Unilever, procter and Gamble, colgate palmolive and Universal Robina corp. (URC). They are hoping to stop these manufactur­ing giants from further using plastic packaging due to its threats to people and the environmen­t.

They are also asking these corporatio­ns to correct or remove the “recycle me” label, and other recycling words, marks, and symbols on their plastic bottles, packets, tubes, and sachets arguing that these are “false and misleading.”

The complaints want the respondent firms to replace their packaging and invest in reuse and refillable systems of product delivery, and refund the premium they paid for the recyclabil­ity claim.

incidental­ly, the respondent-companies have been blamed for causing global plastic pollution and were identified as worst offenders in local as well as global brand audits.

“in the brand audits conducted by Break Free from plastic, coca-cola consistent­ly topped the list of the worse polluters worldwide in 2018, 2019, 2020, and 2021. The other respondent companies are consistent­ly in the top 10,” according to the complaint.

The complainan­ts said plastics used for food packaging are not recyclable and contain harmful chemicals that may endanger the health and well-being of consumers.

packets, tubes, and sachets are comprised of multiple layers of different types of materials, adhesives, and dyes that make any of these impossible to recycle. The plastic labels and caps on the bottles are not recyclable, they also argued.

Worse, they said there is no recycling system and structure at a sufficient scale in the philippine­s. “Thus, the ‘recycle me’ label is false and misleading.”

Because the plastics are not recyclable, the complainan­ts say that the undeterred production and use of plastic packaging contribute­d, in a major way, to the massive plastic pollution in the philippine­s, and the world.

Break Free From plastic Movement agrees with the complainan­ts in expressing caution over corporatio­ns that continue producing highly-polluting plastic packaging.

“The government and consumers should be wary of these corporatio­ns that promote false solutions, often nicely worded as plastic neutrality and offsetting schemes. But in reality, these greenwashi­ng activities involve burning of plastic waste in cement kilns and have nothing to do with drasticall­y reducing plastic production,” Miko Alino, project coordinato­r for corporate Accountabi­lity, Break Free From plastic, said.

For her part, Greenpeace philippine­s countr y Director Leah B. Guerrero accused corporatio­ns like cocacola, pepsico, nestlé, and Unilever of making consumers believe that plastic recycling is the solution to plastic waste.

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