Philippine Daily Inquirer

BOC: Trash from Australia not toxic

Customs exec notes waste materials already processed, to be used as fuel in cement plants

- — STORY BY JIGGER J. JERUSALEM

A shipment of trash that arrived in Misamis Oriental from Australia early this month will be used as fuel for cement plants in Mindanao, the Bureau of Customs (BOC) said. A BOC official said the imported waste materials, packed in nine containers, had been processed and contained items such as plastic, rubber, wood and paper, which would not pose any public hazard.

CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY— Nine container vans that arrived in Misamis Oriental province from Australia early this month did not contain toxic garbage but processed materials that will be used as fuel for a cement company’s manufactur­ing plants, the Bureau of Customs (BOC) said on Thursday.

The contents of the nine container vans were declared by the importer as “processed engineered fuel” (PEF), said lawyer Roswald Joseph Pague, BOC deputy customs collector for Northern Mindanao.

The materials arrived on May3at the Mindanao Container Terminal (MCT) in Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental, some 26.9 kilometers from this city.

Municipal waste

Pague allayed fears that the materials might be hazardous and were purely garbage, like the trash from Canada that arrived in 2013 and 2014 in Luzon and those from South Korea that was shipped to Misamis Oriental last year.

He said that the imported PEF contained items from municipal waste, such as plastic, rubber, wood and paper, which would not pose any hazard to the public.

“The evil that we’re trying to avoid—[that] it might cause seepage to the water tables or whatever contaminat­ion—is totally absent considerin­g that it will be directly fed to the furnace,” Pague said.

He was referring to cement manufactur­er Holcim Philippine­s Inc., a member of the Lafarge Holcim Group, the company that imported the materials.

No objection

The PEF will be used by Holcim’s cement plants in Davao and Lugait, Misamis Oriental.

Pague said the regional office of the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources’ Environmen­tal Management Bureau (DENR-EMB) had cleared Holcim to import PEF for cement manufactur­ing.

The Singapore-based ResourceCo Asia Pte. Ltd. and EMB have exchanged letters that signified the government’s approval of PEF importatio­n, according to copies of these letters furnished the Inquirer.

In 2017, ResourceCo sought EMB’s approval to export PEF and to supply these to cement manufactur­ers in the Philippine­s.

In his letter to EMB, Pavel Cech, ResourceCo managing director, said “the cement manufactur­ers in the country have been continuous­ly exploring the use of green and alternativ­e fuels and raw materials for use in their cement manufactur­ing process as part of their sustainabi­lity programs.”

In an Oct. 30, 2017 letter, Metodio Turbella, EMB regional director, said his agency had no objection to the importatio­n of PEF to be used as alternativ­e fuel in cement kiln.

In March this year, Turbella said the EMB’s approval of ResourceCo’s bid to export PEF to the Philippine­s was “technicall­y binding until such time that there will be updated legislatio­n or policy on the importatio­n of recyclable materials prohibitin­g the importatio­n of PEF.”

The imported materials are stored at the Phividec Industrial Estate compound in Tagoloan.

The issue about the Australian waste reaching the Philippine­s was first raised by MCT collector John Simon in a television interview on Wednesday. Simon accused the broker of the shipment, the same one who handled the importatio­n of waste from South Korea last year, of infraction and should be held answerable for the entry of the materials.

But Alan Cuyno, technical manager of Holcim Philippine­s Inc., said in the same interview that what the firm had imported was “not garbage” but “lowgrade fuel.”

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 ?? —PHOTO COURTESY OFMGBCENTR­AL LUZON ?? DANGEROUS PATH The road leading to Barangay Diaz in Porac, Pampanga, is accessible only by motorcycle­s and carabaos. The upland village is prone to landslides, prompting environmen­t officials to recommend the relocation of Aeta families living there after a strong earthquake hit the province last month.
—PHOTO COURTESY OFMGBCENTR­AL LUZON DANGEROUS PATH The road leading to Barangay Diaz in Porac, Pampanga, is accessible only by motorcycle­s and carabaos. The upland village is prone to landslides, prompting environmen­t officials to recommend the relocation of Aeta families living there after a strong earthquake hit the province last month.
 ?? —CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? FUEL FROMTRASH Containers of processed waste materials from Australia are stored in an industrial estate in Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental, pending clearance for its release. A cement manufactur­er says it will use the trash as fuel for its plants.
—CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO FUEL FROMTRASH Containers of processed waste materials from Australia are stored in an industrial estate in Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental, pending clearance for its release. A cement manufactur­er says it will use the trash as fuel for its plants.

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