The Standard (St. Catharines)

Canada hires firm to ship back garbage

Rotting garbage will be returned before end of June: McKenna

- MIA RABSON

OTTAWA — Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna says the Canadian trash that has been rotting in the Philippine­s for nearly six years will be back on Canadian soil before the end of June.

McKenna says the government has awarded a contract to a shipping company, Bollore Logistics Canada, that will return 69 containers filled with household waste and electronic garbage.

The containers are what is left of 103 containers shipped by a private Canadian company to the Philippine­s in 2013 and 2014 and labelled improperly as plastics for recycling.

The other 34 containers were already disposed in the Philippine­s, despite objections from local officials and environmen­t groups.

McKenna says the waste must be “safely treated” to meet Canadian safety and health requiremen­ts before it can be shipped back but she anticipate­s all the containers will be returned to Canada by the end of June.

The containers will be disposed of properly within Canada before the end of the summer, she said.

McKenna has not indicated what the cost will be.

“Canada values its deep and long-standing relationsh­ip with the Philippine­s and has been working closely with Filipino authoritie­s to find a solution that is mutually acceptable,” she said in a statement.

The announceme­nt comes hours after Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte ordered his government to find a company to take the waste and then leave it in Canadian waters.

Presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo held a news conference to announce that Duterte has ordered officials to look for a private shipping company to transport the garbage to Canadian territory in an escalation of his increasing­ly adversaria­l stance.

The Philippine­s will shoulder the cost of the garbage shipment, Panelo said.

“If Canada will not accept their trash, we will leave the same within its territoria­l waters or 12 nautical miles out to sea from the baseline of any of their country’s shores,” Panelo said.

“The president’s stance is as principled as it is uncompromi­sing: The Philippine­s as an independen­t sovereign nation must not be treated as trash by other foreign nations.”

Panelo said Duterte was upset “about the inordinate delay of Canada in shipping back its containers of garbage,” adding “We are extremely disappoint­ed with Canada’s neither here nor there pronouncem­ent on the matter.”

“Obviously, Canada is not taking this issue nor our country seriously. The Filipino people are gravely insulted about Canada treating this country as a dumpsite,” Panelo said.

The garbage caused a diplomatic dust up between the two countries. It arrived during the term of the former Conservati­ve government, which directed foreign affairs officials to negotiate a deal with the Philippine­s to dispose all the trash there or find another Asian nation willing to take it.

The Philippine­s objected and no other country agreed to accept the waste.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was asked about it on visits to Manila in both 2015 and 2017, saying initially he couldn’t do anything about it because it was a private commercial transactio­n, and then later saying Canada was amending the law to prevent such shipments and that it was theoretica­lly possible for Canada to take the garbage back.

Still Canada tried to convince the Philippine­s to dispose it locally, despite a 2016 court order there to have the waste returned to Canada. A working group of officials from both countries was establishe­d last fall to try to conclude the matter, with the main issue being who would pay for the cost.

In April, Duterte raised the stakes, threatenin­g to “declare war” over the garbage and telling Canada he was going to ship it back if they didn’t do something about it by May 15. The threat worked with Canada agreeing to pay the costs and looking for a company to ship the containers back to Vancouver, although the May 15 deadline was missed.

 ?? BULLIT MARQUEZ
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Environmen­talists stage a mock die-in protest outside the Canadian Embassy in Manila, Philippine­s.
BULLIT MARQUEZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Environmen­talists stage a mock die-in protest outside the Canadian Embassy in Manila, Philippine­s.

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