Philippine Daily Inquirer

‘Norte’ crematoriu­m has no permit since ’14

Pollution watchdog alerts Erap about cemetery’s Clean Air Act violation

- By Dona Z. Pazzibugan @dpazzibuga­nINQ

The crematoriu­m of the Manila North Cemetery has been operating without a permit from the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) for the last two and a half years.

This was revealed on Sunday by the waste and pollution watchdog EcoWaste Coalition, which had notified Manila Mayor Joseph Estrada of the cemetery administra­tion’s violation of the 1999 Clean Air Act, or Re- public Act No. 8749.

EcoWaste said the crematoriu­m’s permit to operate issued on May 13, 2009, by the DENR Environmen­tal Management Bureau’s (EMB) Metro Manila office had expired on May 13, 2014.

As of Friday, the EMB said, the crematoriu­m inside the sprawling 54-hectare public cemetery still had no valid permit to operate.

Reached for comment, Daniel Tan, head of Manila North, admitted the lapses but said

he was not aware that the permit had already expired before he assumed office in 2014.

Tan said he had asked his staff to start the process for the permit renewal, which they are expected to accomplish this week.

Photos taken on Oct. 25 and Nov. 5 showed thick dark smoke coming out of the crematoriu­m’s stack.

EcoWaste said the emissions directly affect not only the vendors in the vicinity but also commuters on Blumentrit­t Road, Dimasalang Street and Aurora Boulevard; residents of Barangay 370 and surroundin­g neighborho­ods, as well as the people at Chinese General Hospital and Chinese General Hospital Colleges.

The EMB National Capital Region told EcoWaste that the crematoriu­m, by operating a furnace without a valid permit and failing to submit selfmonito­ring reports of its emission rates, violated the Clean Air Act’s Rule 19, Section 1.

The facility also violated Rule 25, Section 2 for emitting dense black smoke.

The facility also violated DENR Administra­tive Order 2013-22 for failure to register as a hazardous waste generator, and DENR Administra­tive Order 2014-02 for failure to designate a pollution control officer.

EcoWaste reminded Estrada that he signed the Clean Air Act when he was President in 1999. The law requires all sources of air pollution to secure a permit prior to operating.

“Studies have shown that crematorie­s discharge environmen­tal pollutants including carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxide, sulfur dioxide, hydrogen chloride, dioxins, furans, formaldehy­de and mercury vapor, as well as minuscule particulat­e matters,” EcoWaste national coordinato­r Aileen Lucero said in a letter to the mayor.

“We are particular­ly concerned that mercury, a neurotoxin, is being emitted into the atmosphere from the dental amalgam of deceased persons being cremated,” she added.

 ??  ?? Green advocates note the thick, dark smoke coming from this facility at Manila North.
Green advocates note the thick, dark smoke coming from this facility at Manila North.

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