BusinessMirror

PPA: Single-use plastics ban stays

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The Philippine Ports Authority (PPA) has reiterated its ban on all single-use plastics at all ports under its jurisdicti­on as it moves forward to sustainabl­e port operations.

PPA Officer in Charge-general Manager Francisqui­el O. Mancile said all port managers across its 25 Port Management Offices must strictly impose the directive embedded under PPA Memorandum Circular No. 11-2021.

he added that this will also go hand in hand with the theme of the 2022 National Maritime Week Celebratio­n: “New Technologi­es for Greener Shipping.”

“PPA already has an existing ban on single-use plastics. Since last year, we are not only banning the use and entry of such plastics in the ports but also in all facilities and offices under the agency,” Mancile said in a statement.

“While we do not impose any fine or penalty to erring passengers, stakeholde­rs, and employees, we are confiscati­ng these kinds of materials for proper disposal.”

PPA Memorandum Circular No. 11-2021, meanwhile, follows the National Solid Waste Management Commission Resolution No. 1363 dated February 12, 2020 directing a ban on the unnecessar­y use of singleuse plastic products in government agencies and is seen as a major leap to reduce the use of single-plastic items from polluting waterways, kill marine life and further increase the country’s solid waste.

The ban includes plastic cups thinner than 0.2 millimeter­s, plastic drinking straws, plastic spoons, plastic forks, plastic knives, plastic coffee stirrers, and plastic labo and thinned-filmed sando bags thinner/ lighter than 15 microns.

Aside from this, PPA has also earlier partnered with the World Wide Fund for Nature (Wwf)-philippine­s on the same initiative­s involving three PPA ports—the North Port,

Port of Batangas, and Port of Cagayan de Oro—in a bid to reduce plastic leakage at the said ports by 50 percent by 2023.

The Maritime Industry Authority (MARINA) and the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG), which are also part of the three-pronged maritime sector of the Department of Transporat­ion, also expressed readiness to impose similar initiative­s in their areas of jurisdicti­on. The PCG said they will lev y heav y fines and penalties to their erring personnel who will be found violating the ban. At the same time, the MARINA will look into further strengthen­ing the regulation imposed on local ships.

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