Mindanao Times

ECOWASTE ....

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prompted by the group’s discovery of 31 more spray paint products representi­ng 12 brands, which have been verified to contain lead above the legal limit of 90 parts per million (ppm).

Before 2023 ended, the group submitted 31 brightcolo­red paint products to SGS, a global testing company, for lead content analysis. The products, mostly imported from China and Thailand, were obtained from online sellers and from retail stores located in the cities of Baliwag, Makati, Manila, Cebu, Lapu-Lapu, Mandaue, and Davao, and the municipali­ties of Pateros and San Antonio (Nueva Ecija).

Based on the laboratory test results, all the 31 paints contained lead in excess of 90 ppm, the maximum limit for lead in paint products under the DENR A.O. 2013-24, or the Chemical Control Order (CCO) regulating lead and its compounds.

None of these leadcontai­ning paints were manufactur­ed, imported or distribute­d by member companies of the Philippine Paint and Coatings Associatio­n (formerly PAPM).

Twenty-four of these paints contained high lead concentrat­ions above 10,00O ppm. Topping the list of products with the highest lead content were Sanvo Aerosol Paint (yellow) with 118,000 ppm and Top Tibay Spray Paint (canary yellow) with 111,000 ppm.

Among the spray paint brands with lead content above 90 ppm were Chappie (orange red), Greenfield (gold), JM (grass green, leaf green), Koby (deep red, Mars red, orange red, Suzuki red), Korona (grass green), Nikko (apple green, grass green, green, orange, medium yellow, yellow), Parlux (canary yellow), Sanvo (orange, yellow), Tiger (grass green, bright red, lemon yellow), Top Tibay (fresh green, canary yellow, medium yellow), Yestar (art yellow), and Bad Axe (sky blue, jade green, canary yellow, deep yellow Gongcheng orange yellow, orange yellow).

None of these paints provided lead content informatio­n and warning. In fact, the four lead-containing Korona and Tiger spray paints even carried the “No Pb” pictogram (Pb is the chemical symbol for lead from the Latin plumbum) despite having lead in the range of 171 to 67,800 ppm.

“The continued sale of non-compliant paints in online shopping sites and retail stores should prod the authoritie­s to strengthen

existing enforcemen­t mechanisms and get these products removed from commerce without delay,” said Manny Calonzo, Campaigner, EcoWaste Coalition. “The government should also embark on new initiative­s that will uphold the lead paint ban, including nominating lead chromates, the most common lead-based paint pigments, for listing under the Rotterdam Convention. We believe this will help in controllin­g the global trade of lead chromates used in the manufactur­e of paints, as well as paints containing them.”

“The availabili­ty of lead-based paints in the market despite the ban

is deeply concerning as such products are a major source of lead exposure among children,” said Jeiel Guarino, Internatio­nal Lead Paint Campaigner, Internatio­nal Pollutants Eliminatio­n Network (IPEN). “Lead is considered a nonthresho­ld toxicant --- there is no known threshold for lead exposure that is deemed safe. Exposure to this potent neurotoxin can harm a child’s developing brain and nervous system, which can result in learning difficulti­es, reduced intelligen­ce, low performanc­e in school and behavioral problems.”

The EcoWaste Coalition and IPEN are one in urging stakeholde­rs from

the government, industry, civil society and other sectors to actively support policy measures and other initiative­s that will protect vulnerable population­s, particular­ly children, women of child-bearing age and workers, from the harmful effects of exposure to lead from leadcontai­ning paint, dust, and soil.

The EcoWaste Coalition will notify concerned agencies about the 31 leadcontai­ning spray paints and request for necessary regulatory action to uphold the nation's historic lead paint ban, which received the coveted Future Policy Award (special category on lead in paint) in 2021.

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