Manila Bulletin

Plastic trash swamps Davao City after flood

- By ANTONIO L. COLINA IV

DAVAO CITY – A Davao Citybased environmen­tal group called on policymake­rs to come up with stricter regulation­s to address plastic pollution as various singleuse plastic (SUP) wastes were left on the streets in the aftermath of the flooding here Saturday.

Interface Developmen­t Interventi­ons for Sustainabi­lity (IDIS) Executive Director Atty. Mark Peñalver said in a statement Sunday that he hoped that it would serve as an eye opener for the public and policymake­rs to adopt more sustainabl­e, resilient, disaster-adaptive developmen­t, and environmen­t-responsive policies for this city.

“The flooding last night is heartbreak­ing and a very unfortunat­e situation to look at. The aftermath is no different,” he said.

He added that seeing a lot of wastes, many of which plastic, carried by the flood was problemati­c and only showed how these contribute­d to the flooding situation here.

Penalver said it also showed how much plastic wastes are being generated and the failure of the city and the community to effectivel­y manage them.

“With the current policy environmen­t, the policy makers should come up with a stricter policy that would address plastic pollution. But let us not also forget to make those who produce these plastic wastes accountabl­e and responsibl­e. They are as guilty for the effects that brought about by their unsustaina­ble practices,” he said.

The City Council of Davao passed last March 2 an ordinance regulating the sale, distributi­on, and use of SUPs such as “drinking cups, ice cream cups, condiments or gravy containers, cup lids, stirrers, cutleries, straws, meal boxes, pastry or cake boxes, egg containers or clamshells, balloon sticks, and hand gloves.”

One year after the effectivit­y of the ordinance, the selling of the SUPs will not be allowed without a “special permit to sell” issued by the City Mayor’s Office, and upon showing that there are no commercial­ly available alternativ­es.

However, Peñalver said the ordinance does not prohibit the usage, distributi­on, and selling of sando bags, labo bags, and polyethyle­ne terephthal­ate (PET) bottles.

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