BusinessMirror

No approved SWMP for 445 LGUS, DENR unit reveals

- Jonathan L. Mayuga

ATOTAL of 445 local government units (LGUS) still have no approved 10-year solid waste management plan (SWMP) as mandated by Republic Act 9003 or the Ecological Solid Waste Management Plan of 2000.

According to the Environmen­tal Management Bureau (EMB) of the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR), the DENR-LED National Solid Waste Management Commission (NSWMC) reported that out of 1,592 local government units (LGU) nationwide, only 1,147 have approved SWMPS.

The DENR-EMB is looking forward to the approval of all remaining 10-year SWMPS of cities and municipali­ties nationwide this year.

To achieve the 100 percent target, EMB has called on the remaining 445 LGUS with no approved and submitted SWMPS to take proactive actions to develop their plans and have them approved by the NSWMC.

The EMB urged governors and mayors whose provinces, cities, and municipali­ties concerned to expedite the submission of their plans, as it expressed its commitment to help LGUS needing assistance and technical support.

During the celebratio­n of National Zero Waste Month in January, the EMB, the Department of the Interior and Local Government and EMB regional offices conducted a two-day virtual meeting that served as a platform for LGUS to raise their issues and concerns on the preparatio­n of their plans.

The virtual meeting was attended by over 300 participan­ts from LGUS across three regions, which availed of consultati­ons and made status follow-ups and requests in relation to their respective SWMPS.

After the meeting, the EMB expressed hope that all LGUS nationwide will have their approved SWMPS by the end of the year.

Under RA 9003, every LGU is mandated to have a 10-year SWMP. The law states that “the province, city or municipali­ty, through its local solid waste management boards, shall prepare its respective 10-year solid waste management plans consistent with the national solid waste management framework.”

The said plan should put “primary emphasis on implementa­tion of all feasible reuse, recycling, and composting programs while identifyin­g the amount of landfill and transforma­tion capacity that will be needed for solid waste which cannot be reused, recycled, or composted.”

In the SWMP process, the concerned EMB Regional Office will review and evaluate the plans submitted by the LGUS and endorse them to the EMB Central Office for further review.

If the plan lacks specific requiremen­ts, the SWMP will be returned to the LGU for further action. If the plan is suitable for considerat­ion, it will be recommende­d to the Executive Committee of the NSWMC, which will decide whether or not to support the plan for final approval by the NSWMC en banc.

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