Philippine Daily Inquirer

Dumping sachet as packaging

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Last week, respected environmen­tal activists, leaders of nongovernm­ent organizati­ons, as well as government and private institutio­ns issued an urgent and timely public call for Filipinos to “break up” with sachets, those small, single-use plastic packaging used for practicall­y everything—from shampoo to soap, toothpaste, cooking oil, and instant coffee. Single-use plastics, mainly sachets, are so much a part of Philippine households that, according to a study by the Global Alliance for Incinerato­r Alternativ­es (Gaia), they account for half of the country’s plastic waste, 20 percent of which end up in the ocean, posing a significan­t risk to those who consume seafood. Sachets also expose coastal communitie­s to contaminat­ed water supply and flash floods due to clogged waterways.

As the United Nations Environmen­t Programme noted, the world has become “addicted” to single-use plastics— those meant to be thrown away after a brief single use. Sachets have become such an integral part of everyday life that they have resulted in “severe environmen­tal, social, economic and health consequenc­es.”

This explains why some 29 individual­s and leaders, including French ambassador Michèle Boccoz, Commission­er Rachel Herrera of the Climate Change Commission of the Philippine­s, former Ifugao representa­tive Teddy Baguilat Jr., and Save the Philippine Seas cofounder Anna Oposa have issued a manifesto calling on government to legalize and mainstream the refilling of products, starting with toiletries, to start the journey toward a “sachet-free future.”

The signatorie­s said encouragin­g a refilling system for widely used products, especially among variety or sari-sari stores where 67 percent of Filipinos buy their everyday needs, can serve as a starting point that “can spark significan­t change” in sustainabl­e packaging for household products and “enable [consumers] to ... further reduce their plastic footprint.”

As consumers, the signatorie­s pointed out “the extensive effect of sachet pollution not just on the environmen­t but also on the overall quality of human life,” not just in one’s community and workplace, but also on “the health and the well-being of families and loved ones.”

Mainstream­ing the practice of refilling would be an opportunit­y as well for the Philippine­s to fulfill its commitment­s under the Paris agreement concerning climate mitigation and adaptation, and for businesses to be able to support this path to sustainabi­lity, the signatorie­s added.

“We believe that we can make change happen when we take to heart the critical statistics on sachet pollution, consider its human impact, listen to science and the call of those at the grassroots level, and collaborat­e to find the most affordable, accessible, and sustainabl­e alternativ­es,” the manifesto stated.

Back in 2019, Gaia released the findings of its five-year trash audit covering 21 sites across the Philippine­s, and revealed that the average Filipino uses 591 pieces of plastic sachets every year.

“The problem is the huge amount of single-use plastics being produced—not just the way waste is managed,” said Froilan Grate, executive director of Gaia Asia-Pacific, one of the signatorie­s of the manifesto.

This and other disturbing findings prompted the No Other Year for Plastics coalition convened by MakeSense Asia and its partner organizati­ons to appeal to corporatio­ns and manufactur­ers to provide “a more sustainabl­e and Earth-friendly alternativ­es to sachets,” while urging consumers to reduce their own purchase of products in sachets.

Sen. Pia S. Cayetano, chair of the Senate committee on sustainabl­e developmen­t goals, innovation and futures thinking, voiced the same concerns in August and prodded her Senate colleagues to stop using plastic bottles and sachets. Quoting the 2019 Gaia study, she revealed that almost 164 million pieces of sachets are discarded in the Philippine­s daily, or around 59.7 billion yearly, choking the country’s waterways and drainage systems.

With the chorus of voices urging an end to the use of sachet packaging growing louder, the government crafted the Extended Producer Responsibi­lity Act, which lapsed into law in July. The law amends the 21-year-old Ecological Solid Waste Management Act that required large manufactur­ing companies to take responsibi­lity for the impact of their products on the environmen­t over the products’ entire life cycle—from manufactur­ing to use, and eventual discard.

But beyond government and the manufactur­ing sector, consumers, too, must be held accountabl­e for plastic pollution and must do their part to reduce its harm to the environmen­t. From such simple acts as reducing the use of products in sachet packaging, consumers can graduate into opting for products that come in refillable or recyclable containers. Using a mug instead of styro cups for coffee should be an easy starting point.

As Cayetano stressed in her privilege speech, change that will benefit the environmen­t and end the scourge of plastic “starts with day-to-day habits, day-to-day changes [that] seem small at first, but collective­ly and over time, [would] result in big changes.”

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