Philippine Daily Inquirer

REPORTED CHINESE WASTE DUMPING IN EEZ ANGERS LAWMAKERS

- By Melvin Gascon, Nestor Corrales and Frances Mangosing @Team_Inquirer

True or not, a report that Chinese ships have not only been intruding into the West Philippine Sea but have also been dumping raw sewage into the waters in the country’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ) has angered lawmakers.

“China treating us as its toilet is a clear violation of both internatio­nal and local environmen­tal laws,” Sen. Grace Poe said on Tuesday.

“We can only hope that this comes as a wake-up call to the administra­tion on the stinking reality that China gives no respect to internatio­nal law, whether it be our territoria­l or environmen­tal rights,” Poe said.

The Chinese Embassy has not responded to a request for comment from the Inquirer.

Foreign Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. on Tuesday dismissed the report as “fake news” on Twitter.

Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana said the report “is not true.”

Poe was both “infuriated and disgusted” when she learned about the report and said the Philippine government must “strongly condemn” the alleged waste dumping and demand an immediate stop.

“Anything less would be unacceptab­le,” she said.

Expressing his contempt, Sen. Ralph Recto, the Senate President Pro-Tempore, said China now has two man-made things that are visible from space: “the Great Wall of China on land, and the Great Wastes of China at sea ... in what might become the Waste Philippine Sea.”

Simularity images

The waste dumping was first reported by Liz Derr, cofounder and chief executive officer of the US geospatial imagery company Simularity, during an online forum on Monday to mark the fifth anniversar­y of the arbitral tribunal ruling that invalidate­d China’s sweeping claims to the South China Sea in a case filed by the Philippine­s in 2013.

“The hundreds of ships that are anchored there are dumping raw sewage, every day onto the reefs they are occupying,” said Derr. “When the ships don’t move, the poop piles up.”

The large amounts of nutrients in the sewage increases the concentrat­ion of chlorophyl­l-a, a measure of phytoplank­ton. Derr warned that an excess in phytoplank­ton would create a hypoxic “dead zone” on the sea floor that would lead to a “cascade of reef damage” that will take years to recover from.

She said satellite images over the last five years showed “visible and dramatic” damage to reefs caused by sewage effluent in some parts of the Spratly Islands in the West Philippine Sea.

“This is a catastroph­e of epic proportion­s, and we are close to the point of no return. This needs to stop immediatel­y,” she added.

Lorenzana questioned the conclusion reached by Simularity “from just looking at satellite photos.”

Even then, he directed the military’s Western Command, which is in charge of the West Philippine Sea, to “verify and investigat­e” the report.

Danger to ecosystem

While the dumping of sewage in open waters is often standard practice for ships, there are regulation­s to ensure that these discharges will not wreak havoc on marine environmen­ts, according to Deo Onda, a marine science professor at the Marine Science Institute of the University of the Philippine­s.

If the discharge is continuous “there will be an effect in the ecosystem,” he told the Inquirer on Tuesday.

“When you have a bloom of phytoplank­ton, when they die, they consume the oxygen. Therefore, it lowers the oxygen availabili­ty in the water,” he added.

In ensuring sustainabi­lity in the South China Sea, including the West Philippine Sea, Onda said it was crucial to consider the ecological connectivi­ty of the marine ecosystems because a change in a certain area could affect fish stocks and reef health in other parts of the ocean.

“If those areas become affected, the possible eggs or larvae of coral, fish and other invertebra­tes [will be affected and], the supply coming from those areas may collapse,” Onda said.

“Once a reef is already degraded and we still continue polluting the area, the effect may actually expand to the other areas of the West Philippine Sea,” he added, noting that a collapse in fish stocks could adversely affect the livelihood and subsistenc­e of those dependent on these waters.

Gabriela Rep. Arlene Brosas said she would call for a congressio­nal investigat­ion of the waste discharge.

“Is this Beijing’s disgusting toast to Duterte’s ‘piece of paper’ remark on the Hague ruling, by allowing its vessels to dump human waste on the West Philippine Sea?

This is perhaps the most visually brazen mockery of our sovereignt­y,” Brosas said in a statement.

“Many fishermen are already having a hard time with China’s aggression in the West Philippine­s Sea, and now, China is making us their toilet,” Cullamat said.

Bayan Muna Rep. Eufemia Cullamat, Sen. Francis Tolentino and Sen. Risa Hontiveros urged the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) to also look into the report.

Sen. Panfilo Lacson said the issue was “serious and sensitive” that it would be best to “fact-check first” before taking any official action.

Environmen­t Undersecre­tary Benny Antiporda said the DENR would be working with the Philippine Coast Guard and the defense department to check the report.

“After that, we will be seeking the attention of the Chinese government through our Department of Foreign Affairs,” Antiporda told reporters. “We will also validate if indeed these are Chinese vessels.”

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