Manila Bulletin

PH turning into a dumping site for foreign trash — EcoWaste

- By CHITO A. CHAVEZ

A Quezon City-based environmen­tal organizati­on has pushed the government to take drastic actions against the entry of the erroneousl­y declared plastic trash from South Korea that entered the country, an incident similar to the still unresolved Canadian garbage dumping controvers­y.

The EcoWaste Coalition feared that the Philippine­s may eventually turn into a dumping ground of other country’s garbage if the government

fails to resolve the issue at the soonest possible time.

As it pushed the panic button, EcoWaste said that if the practice persists, the garbage woes of the country will worsen citing that the Philippine­s is also struggling with its own trash disposal problem.

Fearing a repeat of the still unresolved Canadian garbage dumping scandal, EcoWaste asked authoritie­s to reject the illegal garbage imports from South Korea and to return them at once to their origin.

“We find this latest incident of plastic waste dumping outrageous and unacceptab­le. Why do we keep on accepting garbage from other countries when we know that our country’s plastic waste, which is literally everywhere, is spilling into the oceans and endangerin­g marine life?,” said Aileen Lucero, National Coordinato­r, EcoWaste Coalition.

“We also find it ironic that while South Korea is taking action to control its plastic waste, including banning plastic bags in supermarke­ts starting October this year, and yet, its unwanted plastics are being sent abroad,” she added

Lucero noted that local authoritie­s should put an end to these “garbage imports and to demand that developed countries, manufactur­ers of plastics and other disposable goods, take full responsibi­lity for their products throughout their whole life cycle.”

“The illegal garbage shipments from Canada misreprese­nted as recyclable plastic scraps, which are still in our country, are a stinking reminder of how disadvanta­geous and unjust global waste trade is,” she reminded.

According to the “request of alert order” issued on October 25, 2018 by Joel Pinawin, Supervisor, Customs Intelligen­ce and Investigat­ion Service, Bureau of Customs (BOC)-Cagayan De Oro City, the baled garbage misdeclare­d as “plastic synthetic flakes” arrived from South Korea on board MV Affluent Ocean on July 21, 2018.

The said document stated the shipment was consigned to Verde Soko Phil. Industrial Corp. and the “violation committed" was in relation to Section 1400 of the Customs Modernizat­ion and Tariff Act on “Misdeclara­tion, Misclassif­ication, Undervalua­tion in Goods Declaratio­n,” one of the crimes punishable under the said law.

As stated by John Simon, Port Collector, Mindanao Internatio­nal Container Terminal in Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental: “Kapag plastic flakes, dapat puro plastic flakes ang makikita mo diyan. Pero hinde, nakita naming may kahoy at iba’t ibang materials (If it is plastic flakes we should see all plastic flakes in it. But it was not the case, we saw pieces of wood and other assorted materials in it).”

The incident prompted the EcoWaste Coalition to renew the clarion call it made in 2017 for the government to ban plastic waste imports and for domestic industries requiring plastic scrap inputs to source their supplies locally.

“Barring the importatio­n of plastic garbage should form part of the government’s efforts to improve existing regulation­s to avoid a repeat of the Canadian garbage saga,” the group said.

“Imposing an import ban on scrap plastics may even prompt local industries to seek ways to retrieve locallygen­erated plastic discards,” which can help in reducing the amount of plastics leaking to bodies of water,” the group added.

The EcoWaste Coalition made the call after China announced that it would prohibit the importatio­n of scrap plastics and other wastes by January 2018 “to protect China’s environmen­tal interests and people’s health.”

The Malaysian government announced last month it would phase out in three years the importatio­n of all types of plastic waste following the Chinese ban on waste imports.

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