The Philippine Star

Pinoy, 6 others win environmen­tal prize

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The former president of the Philippine­s’ waste and pollution watchdog Ecowaste Coalition is among seven people from around the world to be awarded a Goldman Environmen­tal Prize for grassroots environmen­tal activism.

Manny Calonzo, 54, has led an effort to ban lead paint. Among his group’s other advocacies is against the improper disposal of burned-out fluorescen­t lamps that can pollute the environmen­t, with mercury posing health and safety hazards especially to uninformed and unprotecte­d waste workers.

According to the website of the Goldman prize, Calonzo spearheade­d an advocacy campaign that persuaded the Philippine government to enact a national ban on the production, use and sale of lead paint. He then led the developmen­t of a third-party certificat­ion program to ensure that paint manufactur­ers meet this standard. As of 2017, 85 percent of the paint market in the Philippine­s has been certified as lead-safe.

Ecowaste Coalition also linked up with other environmen­t groups at a rally in Quezon City last April 18 to question the legality of the newly signed “waste-to-energy” facility deal in Palawan, as they warned cities and municipali­ties not to be duped by possible WTE scams.

On Earth Day last weekend, Calonzo and other environmen­tal activists reiterated the need to free the planet of plastic pollution.

Another winner of the Goldman Environmen­tal Prize is Lee-Anne Walters, who played a key role in exposing the lead-tainted water disaster in Flint, Michigan.

Walters was repeatedly rebuffed by Gov. Rick Snyder’s administra­tion, even as she confronted regulators with bottles of brown water that came from her kitchen tap. Finally, with critical help from a Virginia Tech research team and a local doctor, it was revealed in 2015 that Flint’s water system was contaminat­ed with lead due to a lack of treatment.

Walters, a mother of four, “worked tirelessly behind the scenes to bring justice to not only her immediate family but all residents of Flint,” the Goldman Environmen­tal Foundation said Monday in announcing this year’s winners.

The prize was created in 1989 by the late San Francisco philanthro­pists Richard and Rhoda Goldman. Winners are selected from nomination­s made by environmen­tal organizati­ons and others. The prize carries a $200,000 award. The other winners are: • Francia Marquez of Colombia, who rallied other women to vigorously oppose gold mining in the Cauca region.

• Claire Nouvian of France, who successful­ly campaigned against deep-sea fish trawling.

• Makoma Lekalakala and Liz McDaid of South Africa, who fought to stop a nuclear plant deal between their country and Russia.

• Khanh Nguy Thi of Vietnam, who used scientific research to discourage dependency on coal-fired power.

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