Manila Bulletin

6,500 tons of mixed wastes to be shipped back to S. Korea

- By CHITO CHAVEZ

Some 6,500 tons of mixed wastes now stranded at Misamis Oriental will be shipped back to its origin in Pyeongtaek City, South Korea on January 9.

Representa­tives of the Bureau of Customs (BOC) and the environmen­tal group EcoWaste Coalition said an accord was reached by the Philippine and South Korean government­s for the return of the 51 containers of illegally shipped mixed waste materials.

John Simon, Port Collector at the Mindanao Internatio­nal Container Terminal (MICT) said they expect the 51 garbage-

filled containers stored at MICT to be shipped back by January 9 provided that all regulatory requiremen­ts are readily available.

“Their expedited re-export is what BOC wants and this is what our people are yearning for,” Simon said.

Aileen Lucero, national coordinato­r of EcoWaste Coalition said the group looks ahead to the “imminent return of the Korean mixed garbage shipments to their source.’’

She also strongly pushed for the adoption of stringent policies to prevent the recurrence, including crackdown on the importatio­n of plastic wastes.

Lucero also saw the need for the country’s authoritie­s to act decisively to “protect our country from turning into a global dump for plastics and other wastes’’ that other countries no longer want.

Simon explained that the re-exportatio­n of the 51 containers to South Korea is due to the failure of the consignee, Verde Soko Philippine­s Industrial Corp., to secure prior import permit from the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) and for its misdeclara­tion of the garbage shipments as “plastic synthetic flakes.”

He noted the re-exportatio­n order is pursuant to the provisions of Republic Act 10863 (Customs Modernizat­ion and Tariff Act), Republic Act 6969 (Toxic Substances and Hazardous and Nuclear Wastes Control Act) and the Basel Convention on the Control of Transbound­ary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and Their Disposal, the BOC emphasized.

The re-export of the said 51 containers is estimated to cost US$47,430, specifical­ly for inland and ocean freight charges.

As for the bulk Korean garbage shipments sitting at the Verde Soko compound inside the Phividec Industrial Estate in Barangay Sta. Cruz in Tagoloan, Simon announced that arrangemen­ts will be made to get them re-exported within this month.

The agreement was made following a fruitful bilateral meeting between the two government­s last December 27 and 28 at Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental, which drew over 35 participan­ts, including a fourmember delegation from South Korea led by Mr. Lee Jong Min from the Ministry of

Environmen­t.

BOC-Region 10, together with representa­tives from DENR-Region 10, PHIVIDEC Industrial Authority, the municipal government of Tagoloan and the provincial government of Misamis Oriental, represente­d the government of the Philippine­s at the meeting.

Also present at the meeting were invited representa­tives from the private sector, including the MICT Services Inc., Maersk Lines, Chamber of Customs Brokers, Inc. and the Quezon City based environmen­tal group EcoWaste Coalition.

It will be recalled that a shipload of 5,176.91 metric tons of misdeclare­d “plastic synthetic flakes” exported by Green Soko Co. Ltd. and consigned to Verde Soko Philippine­s Industrial Corp. arrived at the MICT in July 2018 without prior import clearance from the DENR.

The same consignee facilitate­d the importatio­n of additional 51 containers of “plastic synthetic flakes,” which arrived at the MICT in October 2018.

Subsequent inspection by customs and environmen­tal officials found the imported “plastic synthetic flakes” as "misdeclare­d, heterogeno­us and injurious to public health,” causing uproar in both the Philippine­s and South Korea,

including protest actions by the EcoWaste Coalition outside the embassy of the latter in Taguig City on November 15 and December 13, 2018.

The Tagoloan Municipal Council has passed a resolution "strongly condemning the importatio­n of plastic mixed with hazardous waste materials from South Korea".

Senators Koko Pimentel, Nancy Binay, and Grace Poe also filed separate resolution­s directing the proper Senate committees to conduct an inquiry in aid

of legislatio­n,

On November 21, 2018, the government of Korea announced: “The Ministry of Environmen­t on November 21 initiated legal procedure to have the wastes in question in the Philippine­s be brought back in accordance with Article 20 of the Law on Cross-border movement and Disposal of Wastes—Prior Notice of Repatriati­on Order—and embarked on investigat­ion of the violation of Article 18-2 of the said law—False Export Declaratio­n.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines