Philippine Daily Inquirer

NEW WAYS OF REUSING GARBAGE MAY LEAD TO ENVIRONMEN­TAL POISONING, SCIENTIST WARNS

- —KIMBERLIE QUITASOL

BAGUIO CITY— The country is shifting to new technologi­es that will use trash to generate electricit­y but the so-called “winwin” solutions to the garbage crisis may end up poisoning the environmen­t, a scientist warned.

Unless safe technologi­es are installed and environmen­tal managers execute monitoring protocols, these solutions will inevitably produce dioxins, Dr. Jorge Emmanuel, former consultant on health-care waste projects of the United Nations Developmen­t Program and now Silliman University professor, told participan­ts in the State of Nature Assessment ( Green Sona) conference here last week.

The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) describes dioxins as industrial by-products that are of “huge concern for their highly toxic potential.”

Dioxins, which are also produced after volcanic eruptions or forest fires, “tend to accumulate in the food chain ... [and the] higher an animal is in the food chain, the higher the concentrat­ion of dioxins,” according to WHO.

“Any of these technologi­es that says it will take your waste ... it is going to be clean and then you will get energy from it, the first thing you have to remember is it is not making waste disappear,” Emmanuel said.

High maintenanc­e

The Stockholm convention on persistent organic pollutants says waste-to-energy technologi­es must have air pollution devices to lower their dioxin emissions, he said.

At present, devices that measure dioxin in the environmen­t are outdated, Emmanuel said, and there are few experts in the Environmen­tal Management Bureau (EMB) who keep watch over waste-to-energy projects awarded by the Department of Energy.

He also said waste-to-energy systems are expensive and require high maintenanc­e.

Environmen­tal advocates at the Green Sona questioned the ability of local government­s and private contractor­s to handle the operation and maintenanc­e of waste-to-energy plants, citing the failure of some towns and provinces to comply with the establishm­ent of engineered sani- tary landfills and waste recovery facilities as required by the EMB.

Baguio City has launched its own waste management project that combines a waste-to-energy system andmachine­s that convert raw organic waste into fertilizer.

Regulation

It has been spending P90 million yearly to haul garbage to a commercial landfill after the city dump collapsed and was shut down in 2011.

The city plans to put up its landfill at an abandoned openpit mine offered by a mining company in neighborin­g Itogon town, Benguet province.

“We in public health have been pushing for more regulation­s, showing evidence that these dioxins are so problemati­c,” Emmanuel said, adding that solid waste is “not a technology problem but a behavioral matter.”

Waste segregatio­n, com- posting and recycling are still the best ways to manage solid waste, he said, citing the success of the “zero-waste” programs of Pampanga province as well as San Francisco in California and Buenos Aires in Argentina.

Emmanuel said the country’s environmen­tal groups need to be vigilant because waste-toenergy projects will soon be legitimize­d when Congress passes a measure amending the Clean Air Act of 1999 (Republic Act No. 8749) and the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act (Republic Act No. 9003).

He also said environmen­tal groups need to voice out their concerns about House Bill No. 6893, sponsored by Nueva Ecija Rep. Estrellita Suansing, that will “allow the use of thermal and other treatment technologi­es to dispose of or utilize municipal and hazardous wastes for fuel.”

 ?? —MICHAEL JAUCIAN ?? TRADING TRASH In Ligao City, villagers trade their recyclable trash for grocery items.
—MICHAEL JAUCIAN TRADING TRASH In Ligao City, villagers trade their recyclable trash for grocery items.

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