Philippine Daily Inquirer

ENVIRONMEN­TAL GROUPS URGE SENATE TO PASS BILL BANNING SINGLE-USE PLASTICS

- By Jhesset O. Enano and Jane Bautista @Team_Inquirer

Environmen­t groups have challenged the Senate to urgently pass a measure that would regulate the production and use of single-use plastics, after the House of Representa­tives approved a counterpar­t bill last week.

House Bill No. 9147, or the Single-Use Plastic Products Regulation Act, sailed through the third and final reading on July 28, with 190 affirmativ­e votes and no objections.

Environmen­t groups called the approval of the House bill a critical “first step” in the right direction, particular­ly in curbing the country’s plastic pollution problem.

“This also sends a strong message to plastic manufactur­ers that they have a responsibi­lity to significan­tly reduce their contributi­on to the plastics problem and transition to alternativ­e delivery systems,” said Marian Ledesma, Greenpeace Philippine­s campaigner.

Following the bill’s approval, the Senate should respond with a version that promotes genuine solutions to plastic pollution, said environmen­t and health watchdog Ecowaste Coalition.

Their counterpar­t measure, the group said, should not promote “dirty” solutions, such as incinerati­on or the burning of wastes to be turned into energy.

Several bills on the regulation of single-use plastics have been filed in the Senate since 2019, Ecowaste said. None have moved beyond the committee level.

Data from the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources, however, showed that at least 488 local government­s have passed ordinances banning single-use plastics, the group added.

“We only have a few weeks left in the legislativ­e calendar, and with the 2022 national elections fast approachin­g, we believe that now is the right time to pass the national regulation on single-use plastics,” said Coleen Salamat, Ecowaste’s campaigner.

“Our environmen­t and communitie­s cannot afford to go back to start with this bill in the new Congress,” she added.

During the Department of Science and Technology-hosted joint conference on Friday, upcycling surfaced as an accessible and implementa­ble solution “while we are working on the other alternativ­es … especially for the sachet problem,” according to Jonathan Co of Sentinel Upcycling Technologi­es.

Co’s business is focused on manufactur­ing products made of single-use packaging waste transforme­d into durable materials, such as school and monobloc chairs.

Through the Pateros residents’ purchase of four upcycled sorting bins, a total of 1,200 pieces, or 2.4 kilograms, of single-use plastic sachets were kept away from polluting oceans and landfills.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines