The Standard (St. Catharines)

Philippine­s dismisses Canada’s plan to bring garbage back

- MIA RABSON

OTTAWA — The Philippine­s has rejected Canada’s late-June timeline for repatriati­ng its garbage and is moving forward with plans to ship it back to Canada itself.

Presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo told a media briefing in Manila Thursday that Canada’s timeline isn’t good enough and that the Philippine­s government will have 69 containers of mislabelle­d Canadian trash headed back across the Pacific no later than next week.

Earlier this week Panelo said President Rodrigo Duterte had ordered the containers dumped in Canadian waters after Canada missed Duterte’s May 15 deadline to deal with the nearly six-yearold dispute.

“The trash will be sent back the soonest,” Panelo said in Tagalog. “This week or a week after. Definitely not the end of June.”

“We will not allow ourselves to be a dumping ground of trash.”

Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna said Wednesday Ottawa has contracted the Canadian office of the French shipping giant Bollore Logistics to treat the waste and then bring it back to Canada before the end of June. Environmen­t officials say the containers must be fumigated in the Philippine­s before being loaded onto a ship.

McKenna’s press secretary, Sabrina Kim, said Canada is “fully engaged” with the Philippine­s to “promptly remove the waste to Vancouver for disposal.”

The contract with Bollore is worth $1.14 million but the Philippine­s says it will pay to ship the trash back just to get it out of the country.

The containers are the remainder of 103 shipping containers sent to the Philippine­s by a Canadian company in 2013 and 2014, falsely labelled as plastics for recycling. Philippine authoritie­s were alarmed that the amount of material was more than the Philippine importer could process, and ordered an inspection, finding the containers to be filled mostly with regular garbage rather than any material that could be recycled.

Canada and the Philippine­s have battled since 2014 about what to do with the contents. The Philippine­s has recently recalled its ambassador and consuls general until Canada deals with the waste.

Several environmen­t groups in both Canada and the Philippine­s argue Canada violated the Basel Convention, an internatio­nal treaty designed to prevent wealthier nations from using developing countries as trash heaps.

The Canadian company that shipped the waste, Chronic Inc., has since gone out of business; while officials say they would like to try to go after it to get some of the costs back, that is proving difficult. Chronic Inc. is not believed to have violated any Canadians laws when it shipped the waste.

Before 2016, Canada’s regulation­s under the Basel Convention only stipulated that the convention applied to shipments Canada considered hazardous. Canada did not then, and still does not, consider the waste to be hazardous. The Philippine­s does.

As a result of this case, Canada changed its regulation­s to prevent this kind of situation from recurring. Now exports must obtain permits from Environmen­t and Climate Change Canada to ship waste if either Canada or the importing nation deems the contents to be hazardous.

Unlike the Conservati­ves, we will continue to maintain a close dialogue with the Government of the Philippine­s to ensure a positive outcome in a timely fashion.

Garbage-filled containers are not all that rare, with the Philippine­s dealing with another such shipment this week from Australia. Reports from Manila say seven containers of garbage are now being rejected by the Philippine­s.

 ?? BULLIT MARQUEZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Environmen­talists march to demand the Canadian government to speed up the removal of garbage that was shipped to the Philippine­s Tuesday.
BULLIT MARQUEZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Environmen­talists march to demand the Canadian government to speed up the removal of garbage that was shipped to the Philippine­s Tuesday.

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