Philippine Daily Inquirer

Manila Bay gets makeover on int’l cleanup day

- By Jodee A. Agoncillo and Tina G. Santos

THOUSANDS of volunteers gathered yesterday along Manila Bay to pick up the trash on the shore as part of the annual Internatio­nal Coastal Cleanup (ICC) Day.

Philippine Coast Guard spokespers­on Commander Armand Balilo said the volunteers collected thousands of plastic bags of garbage.

By press time, the cleanup had yielded 21 truckloads or 100 tons of garbage, which included glass and plastic bottles, food wrappers, cigarette butts, soda cans and eating utensils, grocery bags, straws and stirrers, plastic bottle caps, plastic lids, take out containers, beverage bottles and plastic cups.

Balilo said the garbage came from informal settlers, particular­ly those living in Parola, Tondo.

Major contributo­r

“They were the major contributo­r of the trash,” he said.

Balilo said the volunteers were composed of students, government and nongovernm­ent organizati­on workers and members of the Philippine Coast Guard Auxiliary, Armed Forces of the Philippine­s and Philippine National Police.

The cleanup had 8,351 registered volunteers and 700 Manila City Hall employees and garbage haulers, who were later joined by 1,000 others from 20 private groups, according to Manila City Hall public informatio­n officer Bambi Purisima.

Last year, there were 107,695 volunteers countrywid­e who picked up 208,438 kilos of garbage.

“Whatever our background­s are, we are united for one purpose: To clean up this bay and its environs, and to restore it to their pristine glory,” Manila Mayor Joseph Estrada said, citing the “worsening” condition of Manila Bay, in his speech before the start of the cleanup.

Estrada said the elders had good memories of Manila Bay as “a clean bay that teemed with marine life and was remarkably blue—a source of visual pleasure. Now, Manila Bay signifies pollution, irresponsi­ble management, lack of discipline and political will,” he said.

Mother Nature strikes back

Estrada urged the people to act quickly and help in cleaning up Manila’s coastal areas as “Mother Nature is striking back.”

“Millions of consumers now have to contend with daily nine-hour water interrupti­ons in Manila because Angat Dam’s water level remains critical,” Estrada said, attributin­g the developmen­t to the onset of El Niño.

In 2009, a similar phenomenon occured, forcing water concession­aires to ration the daily water supply to its millions of customers, he said.

The ICC, Coast Cleanup Philippine­s’ largest volunteer effort for the oceans, is held every third Saturday of September and participat­ed in by the cities of Manila, Pasay and Navotas and 20 provinces.

People worldwide gather on beaches, coasts, rivers and waterways to remove trash and record informatio­n that will result in better waste management policies, plans, product packaging designs, and in stirring consciousn­ess among the people, the group said in its website.

ICC was started in 1986 in Texas through the initiative of Ocean Conservanc­y, a nongovernm­ent organizati­on for the protection of the oceans.

 ?? MARIANNE BERMUDEZ ?? THOUSANDS of volunteers as far as the eye can see crowd the shore of Manila Bay to pick up trash on Internatio­nal Coastal Cleanup Day yesterday.
MARIANNE BERMUDEZ THOUSANDS of volunteers as far as the eye can see crowd the shore of Manila Bay to pick up trash on Internatio­nal Coastal Cleanup Day yesterday.

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