The Philippine Star

Canada waste dumping case brought before int’l body

- By RHODINA VILLANUEVA

Environmen­tal groups Basel Action Network (BAN) and BAN Toxics (BT) have submitted the case of Canada’s waste dumping in the Philippine­s to the Basel Convention Secretaria­t over its supposed negligence of its treaty obligation.

In a letter, BAN and BT asserted that as party to the Basel Convention, Canada is bound to strictly control their export of waste.

“Canada, however, has maintained that its domestic laws do not control household waste, which indicates Canada’s failure to properly transpose their internatio­nal treaty obligation­s into domestic law,” the letter read.

The Basel Convention on the Control of Transbound­ary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and Their Disposal – signed in 1989 and entered into force in 1992 – aims to reduce or prevent the movement of hazardous waste among nations, particular­ly from developed countries to less developed nations.

Under the treaty, illegal waste traffic must be prosecuted by parties, including Canada, as a criminal act and the illegally exported waste should be returned to its territory unless it is impractica­ble to do so.

According to Angelica Carballo-Pago of BT, it is “necessary for the Basel Secretaria­t to step in” to ensure that Canada and the Philippine­s are not skirting their obligation­s under the treaty.

“While the Secretaria­t cannot compel Canada to take back the waste, it can issue a cautionary statement and provide advice regarding future compliance to help countries implement the Convention,” Pago said.

About a month ago, wastes from Canada that were in 24 of 103 container vans were buried in a landfill in Tarlac. The move was met with widespread protests in the country.

The Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources as well as some legislator­s and civil society groups have called on Canada to take back their supposedly illegal waste shipment which has been in the Philippine­s for more than a year now, but Canada has refused to take any responsibi­lity over the export.

According to BAN executive director Jim Puckett, however, Canada has “admitted” its failure to properly implement the Convention.

“This means that they are not in compliance (with the treaty) and this has resulted in significan­t economic and environmen­tal harm to the Philippine­s. We have asked them on several occasions to take responsibi­lity required of them under the law and they have simply refused,” Puckett said.

“Cases like this require the Secretaria­t to act. If this gross non-compliance is simply swept under the carpet, the Basel Convention and indeed all internatio­nal law becomes but a sad joke. We have faith that the Secretaria­t will do the right thing and trigger this case,” he added.

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