The Philippine Star

World Environmen­t Day: Let’s stop plastic pollution

- By RHODINA VILLANUEVA

The Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) has urged the public to be more responsibl­e in managing garbage since waste, particular­ly plastic, can be devastatin­g for marine biodiversi­ty.

Plastics are non-biodegrada­ble materials, which do not decay. Once discarded, plastics are likely to end up in oceans after being washed down from rivers and toilets or blown by wind from dumpsites.

“Small litter like candy wrappers end up in our oceans. It is eaten by marine species, clogging their stomach and causing their death,” DENR Undersecre­tary for Policy, Planning and Internatio­nal Affairs Jonas Leones said on the occasion of World Environmen­t Day yesterday.

“Next to China and Indonesia, the Philippine­s placed third in the list of countries with most ocean plastic pollution,” he added, citing a 2015 study conducted by the University of Georgia.

Leones said the result of the study should serve as a “wake up call” for the Philippine­s to reduce its use of plastics.

The Environmen­tal Management Bureau said that while there is no nationwide ban on plastic, most local government units passed ordinances to regulate plastic use in the towns and cities.

Some stores and supermarke­ts have taken to replacing plastic bags with paper bags and encouragin­g customers to bring reusable bags for their purchases.

Environmen­t Secretary Roy Cimatu has advised the public to refrain from using single-use plastic items, such as pet bottles and grocery bags, which usually end up polluting the oceans and waterways.

“It is high time we refrain from using disposable plastic products that are used for minutes, but persist in the environmen­t forever,” he said.

The DENR said the easiest and best way to reduce plastic waste is to use reusable alternativ­es, such as eco-friendly tumblers and eco-bags.

Waste-to-energy incinerati­on

According to environmen­talists, the waste-to-energy (WtE) incinerati­on is not the solution to the country”s garbage crisis.

“WtE incinerati­on emits a wide range of toxic and hazardous air pollutants. These include heavy metals and nanopartic­les as well as persistent organic pollutants (POPs) such as dioxins and furans. These extremely toxic substances are subject to the Stockholm Convention on POPs, a UN treaty for the worst of the world’s hazardous chemicals,” said IPEN senior advisor Mariann Lloyd Smith.

IPEN is a global network of NGOs working together for the eliminatio­n of toxic chemicals.

The Stockholm Convention, of which the Philippine­s is a state party, has also acknowledg­ed that incinerati­on of municipal or hazardous waste is a prime source of unwanted POPs.

Signatorie­s to the Convention are obliged to reduce and, where possible, eliminate POP chemicals.

But the local government of Puerto Princesa City reportedly plans to put up a P2.1-billion WtE gasificati­on plan that will burn the city’s discards estimated at 100 metric tons per day.

The Environmen­tal Legal Assistance Center has raised concern over the city government’s plan.

“We hope the city government will hear us out, rethink its plan and opt for holistic waste prevention and reduction strategies to cut the volume of discards requiring final disposal,” said lawyer Gerthie Mayo-Anda, executive director of the Environmen­tal Legal Assistance Center.

No Burn Pilipinas, an alliance of over 50 civil society groups, wrote to Puerto Princesa City Mayor Lucilo Bayron requesting his office to heed the Philippine ban on waste incinerati­on and pursue zero waste as the sustainabl­e approach to managing the city’s discards.

“We have called on Mayor Bayron to do the right thing and protect public health and the environmen­t from the dangers of waste incinerati­on by embracing zero waste management solution,” said Ruel Cabile, anti-WtE campaigner of the EcoWaste Coalition.

Take better care of environmen­t

Meanwhile, the National Secretaria­t for Social Action (NASSA) of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippine­s and environmen­talists intend to submit one million signatures to President Duterte to remind him to take a more active stance against factors that contribute to the destructio­n of the environmen­t.

“This right of nature is at the backdrop of our campaign versus mining and dirty energy and climate crisis. The Duterte administra­tion must honor its pronouncem­ent to protect the environmen­t,” said NASSA executive secretary Fr. Edu Gariguez.

The NASSA joined the SALAKYAG (Sakay, Lakad at Layag para sa Sangnilikh­a) 2018, a nationwide mixed action of caravans, marches and boat rides of affected communitie­s and environmen­t advocates.

The SALAKYAG started last May 28 in Zamboanga and ended yesterday on the celebratio­n of the World Environmen­t Day.

Proclamati­on No. 237 declares the month of June as Environmen­t Month in the Philippine­s. June 5 of every year is World Environmen­t Day.

 ?? AFP ?? Billboard art in Santiago, Chile shows a surfer riding a wave made out of plastic bags and bottles as part of a campaign denouncing the pollution of oceans during the celebratio­n of World Environmen­t Day yesterday.
AFP Billboard art in Santiago, Chile shows a surfer riding a wave made out of plastic bags and bottles as part of a campaign denouncing the pollution of oceans during the celebratio­n of World Environmen­t Day yesterday.

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