Manila Bulletin

Filipino behind ban of paints with lead wins global environmen­tal prize

- By CHITO A. CHAVEZ

A Filipino environmen­talist was among the seven recipients of the 2018 Goldman Environmen­tal Prize, the world’s largest award for grassroots environmen­tal activists.

Manny Calonzo – former president of the Quezon City-based EcoWaste Coalition and adviser of the Global Lead Paint Eliminatio­n Campaign

of IPEN, an internatio­nal NGO network for a toxics-free future – was among the awardees in a ceremony at the San Francisco Opera House.

Calonzo was selected by an internatio­nal jury from confidenti­al nomination­s for spearheadi­ng a fruitful advocacy campaign banning the production, sale, and use of paints containing lead, a cumulative poison targeting the brain and the central nervous system.

Calonzo and the EcoWaste-IPEN team conducted studies that generated data on lead content of solvent-based decorative paints sold in the Philippine­s; organized awareness-raising activities on lead poisoning prevention; built links and alliances with the paint industry and other stakeholde­rs; pushed for mandatory lead paint standard and regulation; and promoted the world's first third-party Lead Safe Paint Certificat­ion program.

The other Goldman Environmen­tal Prize winners this year are Francia Marquez from Colombia, Claire Nouvian from France, Makoma Lekalakala and Liz McDaid from South Africa, Leeanne Walters from USA, and Khanh Nguy Thi from Vietnam.

The prize was establishe­d in 1989 by San Francisco civic leaders and philanthro­pists Richard and Rhoda Goldman and carries a $200,000 award.

Calonzo dedicated the award to Filipino children and youth, including those yet to be born, who deserve to grow and develop in a pollution-free environmen­t that will not expose them to lead in paint and dust, which can result in life-long decrease in intelligen­ce and other adverse health impacts.

“To protect and foster the brains and bodies of our children and youth, and improve the safety of their living, learning and playing environmen­ts, the Philippine­s took the crucial decision to ban lead-containing paints, a major source of childhood lead exposure,” Calonzo told the cheering crowd of 3,000 people.

“By phasing out lead-containing decorative paints in 2016 and leadcontai­ning paints for industrial uses by 2019, we hope to achieve a lead safe paint market by 2020 and ensure a lead safe environmen­t for all, especially for children and babies still growing in the womb,” he emphasized.

Reflecting the collaborat­ive nature of the campaign, Calonzo acknowledg­ed the constructi­ve alliances and relationsh­ips forged among partners from the government, industry, civil society, health sector and the academia.

“With key stakeholde­rs on board and working together, and with support from top environmen­t and health officials, we carried out a spirited campaign to eliminate lead paint, an entirely preventabl­e source of lead exposure,” he said.

“This recognitio­n of our collective success in the Philippine­s, I hope, will inspire global efforts to ban lead paints, particular­ly in developing countries, at a much faster tempo. While a few countries have in recent years adopted binding lead paint laws and regulation­s, much work remains to adequately address this serious human health hazard,” he said.

“No nation in which lead paints are still produced and consumed can claim to have made real progress in ensuring children’s health and safety,” he pointed out.

Calonzo commended the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR), Philippine Associatio­n of Paint Manufactur­ers, EcoWaste Coalition, IPEN, and the Global Alliance to Eliminate Lead Paint for their contributi­ons to the successful campaign.

He specifical­ly recognized Pacific Paint (Boysen) Philippine­s, Inc. and Davies Paints Philippine­s for being the first two companies in the world to earn the Lead Safe Paint® mark under a new third-party certificat­ion program. Another Philippine paint company, Sycwin Coatings and Wires, Inc., is undergoing lead content verificati­on under this program.

 ??  ?? MANNY CALONZO (Photo courtesy of Goldman Environmen­tal Foundation)
MANNY CALONZO (Photo courtesy of Goldman Environmen­tal Foundation)

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