BusinessMirror

‘LGUS face challenges in carrying out solid-waste law’

- By Rizal Raoul Reyes

IT would have been a different scenario in the Philippine­s if the country just fully implemente­d Republic Act 9003, or the Ecological Solid Waste Management (ESWM) Act.

Gloria Estenzo Ramos, vice president of Oceana Philippine­s, said that RA 9003 would have been a game changer which could have helped the country formulate a better green agenda.

“If we had just complied with the provisions of the law, we could have achieved a zero waste campaign,” she said in her presentati­on on “Plastics Impacts on Climate, Health and Human Rights” during the celebratio­n of the Internatio­nal Zero Waste Cities Conference 2023: Zero Waste to Zero Emission in Quezon City on January 26.

“The provisions are really good based on the hierarchy of ecological principles in accordance with the very source of recycling,” Ramos added.

Sen. Loren Legarda authored RA 9003, which was signed into law on January 26, 2001.

According to Legarda, the law emphasizes recycling to ensure less garbage that is actually brought to the sanitary landfill.

Meanwhile, the waste that would be brought to the final disposal site is effectivel­y maintained.

Moreover, it bans open dumps, the use of incinerato­rs and burning of waste. It promotes the use of environmen­t-friendly disposal of solid waste.

Ramos pointed out it is still challengin­g to implement recycling in the local government units as they need a big push to convince their solid-waste management committees to carry out their mandate.

She said the more than two years of Covid-19 has exacerbate­d the plastics crisis as online deliveries proliferat­ed because people had to stay at home and buy their needs online.

She said the Philippine­s is one of the largest contributo­rs of plastic waste with 2.7 million tons of plastic waste generated each year and an estimated 20 percent of this ends up in the ocean,

Even the deepest parts of the Philippine­s are not spared from plastic pollution, according to Ramos.

She cited the research of Filipino oceanograp­her Dr. Deo Florence Onda, who discovered that even Tubbataha Reef is experienci­ng plastic pollution.

Zero Waste Month celebratio­ns originated in the Philippine­s in 2012 when youth leaders issued a Zero Waste Youth Manifesto calling for, among other things, the celebratio­n of a Zero Waste Month.

This was made official when Presidenti­al Proclamati­on 760 was issued, declaring January as Zero Waste Month in the Philippine­s. It was promoted widely by nongovernm­ent organizati­ons and communitie­s that had already adopted this approach to manage their waste.

To date, more than 25 cities across the region have establishe­d zero waste models.

They showcased innovation­s in source separation, organics management, materials recovery and plastics regulation. Several cities have also incorporat­ed waste assessment brand audits.

 ?? ?? OCEANA Philippine­s VP Gloria Estenzo Ramos
OCEANA Philippine­s VP Gloria Estenzo Ramos

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