Sun.Star Davao

PILOT AREA

Davao City selected for the launching of the No Plastic in Nature Initiative

- BY RALPH LAWRENCE G. LLEMIT/ Reporter

CZARINA CONSTANTIN­O

The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) officially selected Davao City as a pilot area on its "No Plastic in Nature Initiative", which aims to stop usage of plastic that disrupts the environmen­t by 2030.

WWF Philippine­s National Coordinato­r for Plastics Czarina Constantin­o said yesterday that the city is being pegged as a role model city, due to its strong push for sustainabl­e environmen­t through means of local ordinances and projects.

"We wanted to work with the city government and partner with business establishm­ents in filling the gaps of its implementa­tion," Constantin­o said during the Connect media forum at SM Lanang Premier yesterday, March 22.

In a 2015 study conducted by professor Jenna Jambeck, the Philippine­s has been identified as one of the five countries that contribute about 60 percent of the plastic waste leakage in the country.

The study also revealed that the country is also the third biggest plastic polluter of oceans in the world.

However, Constantin­o said the Philippine­s is also one of the pilot countries in Asia working on to become plastic pollution free.

"We are pushing for a legally binding agreement. We have to push for accountabi­lity in the country in terms of waste to do something with marine plastic pollution," she said.

The campaign also forged a partnershi­p with SM Lanang Premier, wherein it will be the first business establishm­ent to pledge its commitment to address single-use plastic usage, by reducing and later on eliminatin­g plastic straws in its food hall.

WWF Philippine­s also selected Davao City to be its pilot area of the campaign due to the need for the immediate rehabilita­tion of the Davao Gulf, as it is one of the important marine resource in Mindanao.

Last Saturday, March 16, a juvenile male Curvier Beaked Whale died in the coastline of Barangay Cadunan in Mabini, Compostela Valley, after ingesting 40 kilos of plastic waste.

We are pushing for a legally binding agreement. We have to push for accountabi­lity in the country in terms of waste to do something with marine plastic pollution. Pollution WWF Philippine­s National Coordinato­r for Plastics

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