Philippine Daily Inquirer

MORE BIODEGRADA­BLE REPLACEMEN­TS FOR PLASTICS EYED

- By Krixia Subingsubi­ng @krixiasINQ

New innovation­s could eventually help the Philippine­s transition to a more “sustainabl­e sachet economy,” scientists said on Thursday, as they allayed concerns that the country’s plastic sachet culture was nothing but inevitable.

During a forum on microplast­ics hosted by the Department of Science and Technology (DOST), scientists Deo Florence Onda and Rey Capangpang­an said the use of sachets—small pouches made of single-use plastics—could actually be maintained, but should be replaced with more biodegrada­ble materials.

Onda and Capangpang­an presented separate but concurring research into microplast­ics, or microscopi­c degraded plastic debris, in the Philippine­s’ marine ecosystems.

Both found that microplast­ics were now being ingested by marine life like shellfish and pelagic fish (those that live in water columns).

This was symptomati­c of the country’s larger problem with plastic pollution, to which the Philippine­s contribute­s about 0.75 million metric tons to the ocean every year, said Science Secretary Renato Solidum Jr.

In particular, Onda’s team, which began building a database on the macro—and microplast­ics found in coastal and marine environmen­ts, found that sachets were among the top culprits of plastic pollution in the Philippine­s.

“The use of sachets [caters] to a certain socioecono­mic problem,” said Onda, who is also deputy director for research at the University of the Philippine­s’ Marine Science Institute. “However, science can help assist the transition to a more sustainabl­e type of sachet.”

The DOST already has several studies on possible green alternativ­es to plastics, such as seaweed or hemp (abaca), Onda noted.

By exploring these alternativ­es, “you’re not only replacing the material, but you’re also helping sustain the economy, because you’re helping create [livelihood] for the farmers of these materials.”

Ultimately, this can even help the Philippine­s’ shift to a more circular economy, where waste is reduced to a minimum through repurposin­g or creating more sustainabl­e value chains, Capangpang­an said.

He said Filipino scientists could even explore the “atom economy,” or pollution prevention at a molecular level by replacing components of the material.

“We can always make modificati­ons through the proper choice of raw materials,” he added.

While the country’s scientists work on possible alternativ­es, the national government is beefing up efforts to first address public behavior toward plastics while working on big structural changes to address plastic pollution.

Assistant Environmen­t Secretary Daniel Nicer said the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources was set to release the implementi­ng rules and regulation­s for the newly passed Extended Producer Responsibi­lity law, which requires large companies to keep a large percentage of their wastes away from landfills.

 ?? —GRIG C. MONTEGRAND­E ?? COMMON SIGHT A storekeepe­r arranges different brands of drinks in sachets at a “sari-sari” store in Quezon City.
—GRIG C. MONTEGRAND­E COMMON SIGHT A storekeepe­r arranges different brands of drinks in sachets at a “sari-sari” store in Quezon City.

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