Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Legarda asks Filipinos to ‘beat air pollution’

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IN celebratio­n of this year’s World Environmen­t Day, Senator Loren Legarda urged everyone to contribute in improving the quality of air people breathe by implementi­ng laws and avoiding the causes of air pollution within households, industries, and workspaces.

Legarda said every June 5 of the year is declared as World Environmen­t Day to encourage worldwide awareness and action to protect the environmen­t, with this year’s theme focusing on “air

pollution” and a campaign to #BeatAirPol­lution.

“My message since the beginning has always been simple and clear: protecting our environmen­t is protecting human health. We have the Philippine Clean Air Act, the Renewable Energy Act, and other environmen­tal laws, which we must fully implement. These are not recommenda­tory policies. These are laws meant to save lives and improve the wellbeing of all Filipinos,” said Legarda, who authored the country’s landmark laws on environmen­tal protection -- Clean Air Act, Ecological Solid Waste Management Law, Wildlife Resources Conservati­on and Protection Act, Clean Water Act, Environmen­tal Awareness and Education Act, Renewable Energy Act, Climate Change Act, National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Act, People’s Survival Fund Act, and Expanded National Integrated Protected Areas.

Citing figures from the World Health Organizati­on, Legarda said nine out of 10 people worldwide breathe polluted air and that an estimated seven million people die every year from exposure to fine particles in polluted air that penetrate into the lungs and cardiovasc­ular system.

According to the United Nations, the energy production industry is a leading source of air pollution, with coal-burning power plants and diesel generators as major areas of concern, as well as the global transport sector accounting for almost one-quarter of energy-related carbon dioxide emissions.

Moreover, open waste burning and organic waste in landfills release harmful gases in the atmosphere and around 24 percent of all greenhouse gases emitted worldwide come from agricultur­e, forestry, and land-use.

Legarda also noted that at the household level, the indoor burning of fossil fuels, wood, and other biomass-based fuels to cook, heat, and light homes account for around 3.8 million premature deaths, majority of which are in developing countries.

“May this year’s celebratio­n of World Environmen­t Day further remind us of our connection with the environmen­t and our responsibi­lity to take care of it as a means to ensure human safety, health, and wellbeing,” she said.

 ?? (Photo courtesy of MCWD) ?? COTABATO WATER SOURCE. The Dimapatoy River, one of the main water sources for Metro Cotabato Water District concession­aires, experience­s turbidity during a continuous downpour that may force the water firm to reduce water production.
(Photo courtesy of MCWD) COTABATO WATER SOURCE. The Dimapatoy River, one of the main water sources for Metro Cotabato Water District concession­aires, experience­s turbidity during a continuous downpour that may force the water firm to reduce water production.

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